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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Revelation Explained, by F. Smith
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Revelation Explained
+
+Author: F. Smith
+
+Release Date: August 20, 2004 [EBook #13229]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE REVELATION EXPLAINED ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joel Erikson, Christing Gehring, David King, and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+The Revelation Explained
+
+An Exposition, Text by Text,
+of the Apocalypse of St. John
+
+Showing the Marvelous Development of the Prophecies from the Time of
+their Delivery on the Isle of Patmos--The Establishment and Growth of
+Christianity--Rise of Mohammedanism in the Eastern Empire--Of the Papacy
+in the Western Division--Of Protestantism--The Civil History of the
+Territory Comprising the Ancient Roman Empire until the End of
+Time--Together with the Conflicts and Triumphs of the Redeemed until the
+Final Judgment, and their Eternal Reward and Home in the "New Heavens
+and New Earth."
+
+By F.G. SMITH
+
+Author of
+
+"What the Bible Teaches" and "The Last Reformation," etc.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Behold the former things are come to pass, and new things do I declare:
+before they spring forth I tell you of them." Isa. 42:9.
+
+"Surely the Lord God will do nothing, but he revealeth his secret unto
+his servants the prophets." Amos 3:7.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+The subject of prophecy should be of interest to every Bible student.
+Its importance can not be overestimated. By it we are enabled to
+ascertain our true position in this time-world. From the early dawn of
+creation, Inspiration has foretold with certainty the great facts
+connected with the history of God's chosen people. By this means alone,
+the divinity of Jesus Christ and the truth of our holy religion has been
+established in many minds; for it is not in the power of mortals thus to
+vaticinate future events. With such surprising accuracy have these
+predictions been fulfilled that even infidels ofttimes bear witness to
+their truthfulness. "Behold the former things are come to pass, and new
+things do I declare: before they spring forth I tell you of them." Isa.
+42:9. "For I am God, and there is none else; I am God, and there is none
+like me, declaring the end from the beginning, and from ancient times
+the things that are not yet done." Isa. 46:9, 10.
+
+The Revelation is a rich mine of prophetic truth. The history of the
+current dispensation is there delineated in advance so perfectly that we
+can not but attribute its authorship to Him who knoweth the end from the
+beginning, and worketh all things after the counsel of his own will. It
+was written for the special benefit of the people of God, and we should
+give it prayerful consideration.
+
+In the preparation for this work, I have gleaned historical information
+from all the general and ecclesiastical histories, encyclopedias, etc.,
+within my reach, and only regret that I had not access to a still
+greater number. However, knowing that large books are seldom read, I
+determined in advance not to write an extensive work, but to condense
+the subject matter as much as possible, and, therefore, I have been
+obliged to omit much valuable material previously gathered. For this
+reason many lines of prophetic truth penned by others of the sacred
+writers have been passed over in silence, even though relating to the
+same events as certain symbolic visions in the Revelation.
+
+I have availed myself of all the helps and the commentaries within my
+reach in the study of this important subject. However, I have but seldom
+referred to the opinions of expositors. In most cases their explanations
+are not based upon any established rule of interpretation, and the
+definite laws of symbolic language are usually overlooked or
+disregarded. Ordinary readers of the Revelation have always supposed
+that the only course for them was to take the opinion of some learned
+expositor and to believe on _his authority_; and when they have found
+that equally learned and judicious men sustained the most opposite
+views, they have been bewildered amid conflicting opinions and have
+decided that, when such men were at issue, it was useless for them to
+investigate. While, therefore, I have made every available use of their
+opinions, it was only for the purpose of forming my own and of enabling
+myself so to unfold the nature of the symbols that every one might see
+for himself the propriety of the interpretation given.
+
+The present knowledge that has been attained of this prophetic book is
+largely the result of the combined efforts of all who have labored to
+unfold its meaning. No one has had the honor of first understanding all
+its parts, and very few have failed to contribute something, more or
+less, to its true interpretation. Therefore I have endeavored as much as
+possible to gather up the good from the labors of my predecessors and to
+combine it with the results of my own study and research. The Exposition
+of Mr. Lord has had an important bearing on this work. For many
+beautiful thoughts concerning the nature and the use of symbols, in the
+chapter on the nature of symbolic language, I must acknowledge special
+indebtedness to the Lectures of Thomas Wickes on the Apocalypse,
+delivered many years ago, although I have ofttimes arrived at quite
+different conclusions in their interpretation throughout the Revelation.
+Much appreciated assistance has been derived from the works of other
+commentators as well.
+
+There is considerable disagreement among historians themselves regarding
+certain historical points, but their differences are of minor importance
+so far as the present work is concerned. When such points were involved,
+I have simply endeavored to follow the best authorities. Lengthy or
+important quotations from other writers have been duly credited where
+they appear, hence no special mention is necessary in this place. Minor
+extracts are merely enclosed within quotation-marks.
+
+The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, 6 Vols., Philadelphia, 1872,
+is the edition of Gibbon's Rome from which quotations are made.
+
+To assist in simplifying the subject and in placing it before the reader
+in a concise, comprehensive manner, a number of useful diagrams have
+been added; for they serve about the same purpose in the study of a
+subject so complicated as do maps in the study of geography. I would
+especially call attention to the large "Diagram of the Revelation,"
+where the various lines of prophetic truth are outlined in parallel
+series, enabling the reader to comprehend at once where the symbolic
+narrative returns to take up a new line of thought covering the same
+period of time. In these diagrams, however, no attempt has been made to
+set forth every phase of thought connected with the subject; only the
+main features have been outlined.
+
+Feeling directed by the Lord to undertake this work and realizing the
+greatness of the task, I have earnestly sought for divine wisdom and
+guidance, and I humbly acknowledge his gracious assistance in its
+prosecution; and while I can not indulge the hope that human fallibility
+has been overcome, yet I firmly believe that a careful reliance upon the
+Holy Spirit has been an effectual means of avoiding error and unfolding
+many of the hitherto mysterious prophecies of this wonderful book. To
+his worthy name I ascribe all praise and glory. The future, doubtless,
+will witness a still greater development of this subject; for men of God
+more worthy and possessing greater abilities will arise, who, beginning
+where we have left off, will continue its investigation and throw upon
+it additional light as yet unrevealed.
+
+That the Lord will bless The Revelation Explained to the good of his
+church upon earth and grant it a place, however small, in the cause of
+present truth, is my earnest prayer.
+
+Yours in Christ,
+F.G. Smith.
+_Grand Junction, Mich., June 26, 1906_.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO FOURTH EDITION
+
+
+The reception accorded this work when it was first submitted to the
+public was more than gratifying to the author. The lapse of time has
+only tended to confirm still more strongly the fundamental nature of the
+principle of interpretation adopted. In order to supply the constant
+demand, the fourth edition is now issued.
+
+I have taken advantage of this opportunity to make certain revisions
+necessitated by an increase of knowledge since the work was first
+written, nearly twelve years ago. This revision, however, did not
+require an entire re-writing and does not involve a change in
+fundamentals.
+
+F.G. Smith.
+_Anderson, Ind., Mar. 1, 1918_.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+Preface
+Nature of Symbolic Language
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+Introduction, verses 1-11
+Vision of Christ, verses 12-20
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Message to Ephesus, verses 1-7
+Message to Smyrna, verses 8-11
+Message to Pergamus, verses 12-17
+Message to Thyatira, verses 18-29
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+Message to Sardis, verses 1-6
+Message to Philadelphia, verses 7-13
+Message to Laodicea, verses 14-22
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Vision of God's Throne
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+The Book with Seven Seals
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+First Seal Opened, verses 1, 2
+Second Seal Opened, verses 3, 4
+Third Seal Opened, verses 5, 6
+Fourth Seal Opened, verses 7, 8
+Fifth Seal Opened, verses 9-11
+Sixth Seal Opened, verses 12-17
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+God's Servants Sealed, verses 1-8
+The White-Robed Company, verses 9-17
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+Seventh Seal Opened, verses 1-5
+First Trumpet Sounded, verses 6, 7
+Second Trumpet Sounded, verses 8, 9
+Third Trumpet Sounded, verses 10, 11
+Fourth Trumpet Sounded, verses 12, 13
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+Fifth Trumpet Sounded, verses 1-12
+Sixth Trumpet Sounded, verses 13-21
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+The Rainbow Angel
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+Temple and Holy City, verses 1, 2
+The Two Witnesses, verses 3-6
+The Witnesses Slain, verses 7-10
+The Witnesses Resurrected, verses 11-14
+Seventh Trumpet Sounded, verses 15-19
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+Woman and Man-Child, verses 1-6
+Michael and the Dragon, verses 7-12
+The Woman's Flight, verses 13-17
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+The Leopard Beast, verses 1-9
+"The Faith of the Saints," verse 10
+The Two-Horned Beast, verses 11-18
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+The 144,000 on Mount Sion, verses 1-5
+The Three Angels, verses 6-11
+"The Patience of the Saints," verses 12, 13
+Harvest of the World, verses 14-20
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+Seven Last Plagues
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+The First Vial, verses 1, 2
+The Second Vial, verse 3
+The Third Vial, verses 4-7
+The Fourth Vial, verses 8, 9
+The Fifth Vial, verses 10, 11
+The Sixth Vial, verses 12-16
+The Seventh Vial, verses 17-21
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+"Babylon the Great," verses 1-6
+Beast and Ten Kingdoms, verses 7-18
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+Fall of Babylon
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+Marriage of the Lamb, verses 1-10
+Coming of Christ, verses 11-21
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+The Dragon Bound, verses 1-6
+The Dragon Released, verses 7-10
+The Judgment Scene, verses 11-15
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+New Heaven and Earth, verses 1-8
+The Heavenly Jerusalem, verses 9-27
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+River and Tree of Life, verses 1-5
+Christ's Coming and Eternity, verses 6-21
+
+
+
+
+Nature of Symbolic Language.
+
+
+Before proceeding with the interpretation of this wonderful book, it
+will be necessary for us to pause and make inquiry concerning the nature
+of the language employed in its prophecies and concerning the mode of
+its interpretation. It will be seen at a glance that it is wholly unlike
+the common language of life; and it will be useless for us to undertake
+to ascertain its signification unless we understand perfectly the
+principles upon which it is founded.
+
+The question may be asked, "Is the language intelligible at all?"
+Considering the variety of interpretations placed upon it by expositors
+and the opinions generally held respecting it, we might conclude that it
+is not. The majority of the people look upon these prophecies as "a mass
+of unintelligible enigmas," and are ready to tell the student of
+Revelation that this book "either finds or leaves a man mad." But are we
+to look upon its language as being applied at a venture, without any
+definite rule, capable of every variety of meaning, so that we can never
+be quite _sure_ that we have its correct interpretation?
+
+Commentators generally unite in attaching a definite meaning to certain
+symbols, and they tell us that these can not be applied otherwise
+without violating their nature. They may not give us their reasons for
+thus applying them (in fact, they generally do not), yet it is evidently
+assumed that such reasons do exist. Now, if reasons actually exist why a
+definite signification must be applied to the symbol in the one case,
+why do they not exist in another case, and in all cases? If any law
+exists in the case at all, it is a uniform one, for a law that does not
+possess uniformity is no law; otherwise, it would be an unintelligible
+revelation, and the only possible thing left for us to do would be to
+attempt to solve it like a riddle--guess it out. It would be as if the
+writer were to use words with every variety of meaning peculiarly his
+own attached, without informing the reader what signification to give
+them in a given instance. No man has a right thus to abuse written or
+spoken language; and we may take it for granted that the God of heaven
+would not make such an indiscriminate use of symbolical language when
+making a revelation to men. There is no other book the wide world around
+in which language is as carefully employed as in the Bible; and we can
+rest assured that when God gave this Revelation to Jesus Christ "to
+_show_ unto his servants things which must shortly come to pass," he
+made choice of proper symbols whose meaning can be definitely evolved,
+provided we can but ascertain the great underlying principles upon which
+their original selection was based.
+
+In the ordinary communication of our thoughts we employ arbitrary signs
+and sounds to which we have universally agreed to fix a definite
+meaning. Thus, our entire spoken language is made up of a great variety
+of sounds or words with which by long practise we have become familiar.
+We call a certain object a horse, not because there is any similarity
+between the sound and the animal designated, but because we have agreed
+that that sound shall represent that object. So, also, we have agreed
+that the characters h-o-r-s-e shall represent the same thing; and by the
+use of twenty-six characters, called the alphabet, placed together in
+various combinations, we are able to write our entire spoken language.
+
+The incidents connected with the introduction of written language among
+a barbarous people are worthy of remark in this connection. That thought
+can be conveyed to persons at a distance by the use of certain
+cabalistic characters seems to them incredible, and when compelled to
+believe it, they look upon the person that can accomplish such wonders
+as embodying something supernatural. These things I mention merely to
+call attention to the fact that spoken and written language is a curious
+and wonderfully complicated affair. This is brought forcibly to our
+minds when we hear persons conversing in a foreign tongue, or when we
+pick up a book the characters of which are wholly unlike those of our
+own language. To us an English book is full of instinctive beauty, every
+letter or mark possessing a definite meaning that is instantly conveyed
+to our minds, because we have become familiar with them by diligent
+study and practise.
+
+There are other ways of transferring thought besides the complicated
+system just mentioned--ways which are much more natural and simple.
+Thus, a simpler way to represent a certain object would be to draw a
+picture of it; or, better still, to represent a certain character or
+quality by exhibiting, not the object itself, but an analagous one whose
+peculiar character that property is; for examples: the quiet, peaceful,
+gentle disposition of a child, by a lamb; a man of cunning, artful,
+deceptive disposition, by a fox; or a cruel, bloodthirsty, vindictive
+tyrant, by a tiger, etc. This is hieroglyphical or symbolic language.
+This language takes precedence over every other for naturalness and
+simplicity, being common to a greater or less extent among all nations
+and intelligible to all.
+
+Spoken language was undoubtedly a gift from God originally, while
+written language is probably a mere human invention. We are not to
+suppose that the first attempts to convey thought in writing would be by
+an alphabetical system, but by the symbolic, it being, as before stated,
+the most natural and within reach of the ordinary ingenuity of man. This
+is proved by the fact that the inscriptions on the ancient monuments of
+Egypt and the inscriptions of other nations of antiquity are of this
+character. It is also a fact worthy of notice that, four thousand years
+later, men of other countries and of other languages have, by much study
+and a careful comparison of the symbols, been able to decipher with
+accuracy those hierographical representations.[1] This of itself is
+sufficient to establish the point that definiteness can be attached to
+the use and the interpretation of carefully-selected symbols, when the
+principles that governed their original selection are discovered.
+
+[Footnote 1: The systems of hieroglyphical writing employed by various
+nations have, for the most part, remained unintelligible until a key of
+their interpretation was discovered. In 1799 M. Bouchard, a French
+captain of engineers, while digging intrenchments on the site of an old
+temple near the Rosetta mouth of the Nile, unearthed a black stone
+containing a trilingual inscription in hieroglyphics, demotic
+characters, and Greek. The last paragraph of the Greek inscription
+stated that two translations, one in the sacred and the other in the
+popular Egyptian language, would be found adjacent; hence this
+celebrated stone has afforded European scholars a key to the language
+and writing of the ancient Egyptians. The cuneiform writing of the
+Babylonians and Persians remained a mystery also until modern times, but
+great progress has now been made in the deciphering of thousands of
+inscribed clay tablets, cylinders, prisms, etc. The key to its
+interpretation is the celebrated inscription at Behistun, cut upon the
+face of a high rock three hundred feet above its base, and recording a
+portion of the history of Darius. It is written in the cuneiform
+characters, in three languages--Median, Persian, and Assyrian.]
+
+I do not wish to be understood as implying that the symbolical language
+of Scripture is identical with the hieroglyphics of ancient monuments.
+There may be different kinds of symbolic representations; but they are
+not arbitrary, as is spoken language, and can not be arbitrarily
+applied; a fixed law governs them all.
+
+Now, the book of Revelation is made up of this symbolic language. It is
+not, however, confined to this book alone. There are many instances of
+it to be found elsewhere in the sacred volume, and in many cases it is
+explained by inspiration itself, thus giving us a reliable key to the
+whole. Joseph's dream of the eleven sheaves that made obeisance to his
+sheaf was of this description (Gen. 37:7, 8), and his eleven brethren
+were angered, because its meaning was apparent--that they should be
+humbled before him. Also, his dream of the sun, the moon, and the eleven
+stars (verses 9, 10) was understood to signify the subjection of the
+entire family unto him, which was actually fulfilled after Joseph's
+exaltation in Egypt. The chief butler's dream of the vine with three
+branches bearing grapes, which he took and pressed into the king's cup,
+was interpretated by Joseph as signifying the butler's restoration in
+three days to his former position of cup-bearer to the king; while the
+chief baker's dream of the three baskets upon his head, out of which the
+birds ate, was interpretated as signifying his execution in the same
+length of time. Gen. 40. Pharaoh's dream of the seven fat kine and the
+seven lean kine, also of the seven full ears and the seven thin ears,
+signified seven years of plenty and seven years of famine. Gen. 41.
+
+Again, the four divisions of King Nebuchadnezzar's wonderful image was
+explained by Daniel as signifying four universal monarchies and the ten
+toes as signifying the ten minor kingdoms which grew out of the fourth;
+while the stone that was cut out of the mountain without human
+intervention he interpreted as signifying the divine kingdom of God.
+Dan. 2. The two-horned ram of Daniel's vision (chap. 8), according to
+the explanation of the angel, symbolized the Medo-Persian empire, its
+two horns signifying the two dynasties of allied kings that composed it.
+The he-goat signified the Greco-Macedonian empire; his great horn, its
+first mighty king; and the four horns that replaced the great one when
+broken represented four kings under whom the empire would eventually be
+divided into as many parts. In the Apocalypse itself we have a number of
+symbols divinely interpreted, "The seven stars are the angels of the
+seven churches." "The seven candle-sticks which thou sawest are the
+seven churches." "The ten horns which thou sawest are ten kings." "The
+waters which thou sawest ... are peoples, and multitudes, and nations,
+and tongues." "The woman which thou sawest is that great city which
+reigneth over the kings of the earth," etc.
+
+It will be seen that the great underlying principle or _law_ upon which
+symbolic language is based is ANALOGY. An object is chosen to represent
+not itself, but something of analagous character.
+
+Webster defines _symbol_ as follows: "The sign or representation of any
+moral thing by the images or properties of natural things. Thus, a lion
+is the _symbol_ of courage; the lamb is the _symbol_ of meekness or
+patience." Home, in his Introduction to the Study of the Bible, says:
+"By symbols we mean certain representative marks, rather than express
+pictures; or, if pictures, such as were at the time _characters_, and
+besides presenting to the eye the resemblance of a particular object,
+suggested a general idea to the mind, as when a _horn_ was made to
+denote _strength_, an _eye_ and _scepter, majesty_, and in numberless
+such instances; where the picture was not drawn to express merely the
+thing itself, but something else, which was, or was conceived to be,
+analagous to it." The main idea, then, as expressed in the foregoing
+definitions, is the representation of an object, not by a picture of
+itself, but by something analagous, such as the exhibition of moral
+qualities by images drawn from nature. But the use of symbols is not
+confined to the representation of moral subjects alone. Anything may be
+symbolized to which a corresponding analagous object can be found.
+
+To establish the principle of analogy here laid down, it will be
+necessary to refer only to a few of the numerous examples of divinely
+interpreted symbols in the Scriptures. Any one can readily perceive the
+analogy between the seven fat kine of Pharaoh's dream and as many years
+of plenty; so, also, with the seven full, healthy ears that grew up on
+seven stalks. Likewise, the analogy between the seven thin kine and as
+many years of famine, and the seven thin, blasted ears that represented
+the same thing, is apparent. One fat kine or one full ear would
+symbolize one year of plenty, when crops were abundant; while seven
+would represent as many distinct seasons of prosperity, etc. Kine do not
+represent kine, but something analagous. The beasts of Daniel's visions
+do not represent animals like themselves, or a multitude of such
+animals, but something of analagous disposition. The analogy between a
+wild, ferocious beast, stamping upon or devouring everything within its
+reach, and a cruel, persecuting, tyrannical government is apparent. A
+horn does not signify a horn, but some great power, such as a dynasty of
+kings or rulers; and what the horn is to the animal in manifesting its
+desolating disposition, kings and rulers are to an empire in executing
+the persecuting or oppressive principles of the body politic. A pure,
+chaste virgin is used to symbolize the true church of God; whereas a
+corrupt harlot is chosen to represent an apostate church, and
+fornication her idolatrous worship.
+
+Although this principle is worthy of further elucidation, yet enough has
+been said to firmly establish the point that symbolic language is
+founded upon analogy. It is also clear that, whenever we attach a
+literal signification to a symbolic object, we immediately destroy
+entirely its use as a symbol. So we may accept it as one established
+landmark in the interpretation of the Apocalypse, that every symbol,
+regardless of the department from which it is taken--whether from the
+material universe, the animal kingdom, human life or the heavenly
+realm--stands as the representative, not of itself, but of some other
+object of analagous character not found in the same department from
+which it is drawn.
+
+This develops another important fact worthy of attention. If the great
+law of symbolic language is based upon analogy, it is clear to a
+demonstration that the symbols employed _must be_ definitely applied.
+They can not be arbitrary, as the words composing our spoken language
+are. There is nothing in the nature of the thing to prevent our calling
+a horse an elephant, provided we had only agreed universally to adopt
+that designation of the animal referred to (arbitrary sounds can be
+arbitrarily applied); but we violate nature when we attempt to make a
+ferocious tiger the symbol of an innocent child, or represent a
+blood-thirsty tyrant by the symbol of a lamb. A disgusting, polluted
+harlot may be the proper symbol of an apostate church, but of the pure,
+holy church of God--_never_. A proper correspondence must be kept up. We
+must follow nature strictly.
+
+Symbols are drawn from every department--from animate and inanimate
+creation, from animal life and human life, from the visible universe
+below and the heavenly world above, and also from some objects of fancy
+to which there is no corresponding object in existence, such as Daniel's
+four-headed beast, or the one in the Revelator's vision with seven heads
+and ten horns; but in the selection of the same a proper correspondence
+of quality is kept up. The symbols that are chosen to set forth the
+great spiritual affairs of the church are such as are in themselves
+nobler than those selected to describe the political affairs of kings
+and empires, because in the divine estimation the church is of
+infinitely greater importance and occupies a more honorable position
+than worldly kingdoms. Thus, a beautiful virgin bride is chosen to
+represent the church of God; whereas a great red dragon with seven heads
+and ten horns is chosen to symbolize the Pagan Roman empire. The
+glorious body of God's reformers is set forth under the symbol of an
+angel from heaven, with his face as the sun, his feet as pillars of
+fire, and a rainbow upon his head; whereas the Saracen warriors of
+Mahomet are locusts upon the earth, with stings of scorpions. The
+department of human and angelic life is chosen to set forth the
+spiritual affairs of the church, while the department of nature and of
+animal life represents the political affairs of nations. To this general
+rule, there is at least one exception. Certain things connected with
+God's chosen people under the old dispensation are considered proper
+symbols to represent similar things or events in the New Testament
+dispensation, without special regard to the department from which they
+are drawn. Thus, the temple, altar, incense, candlesticks, holy city,
+etc., of the former age, though not taken from the department of human
+or angelic life, are, nevertheless, clearly used to represent affairs of
+the church, the analogy in the case being apparent because of their
+former prominence as connected with the Lord's covenant people.
+
+Again, when the symbol selected is that of a living, active, intelligent
+agent, it represents an analagous intelligent agent. Likewise, the
+actions of the former plainly denote analagous actions in the latter,
+and the effects produced by the actions of the symbolic agent signify
+analagous effects produced by the actions of the agent symbolized. To
+make it clearer: agents symbolize agents, actions symbolize actions, and
+effects symbolize effects. If this be not true--if agents can symbolize
+actions and effects as well as agents, or if actions can symbolize
+agents and effects--then all is an inextricable maze of confusion, and
+well may we repeat the words uttered by a certain minister to the
+writer, "The book should have been called Mystification, not
+Revelation."
+
+The same principle of analogy is carried out in another particular.
+Whenever the enemies of God or destructive agents are intended, objects
+of a corresponding desolating character are chosen as their symbols;
+whereas the peaceful triumphs of the cross, as exhibited by God's chosen
+people, are described under symbols of an equally benign and gentle
+character. Thus, the anti-christian, persecuting power of Rome is
+described as a ferocious wild beast, stamping everything beneath its
+feet and spreading desolation on every side. The Vandal hordes of
+Northern barbarians, who, under Genseric overran the Western Roman
+empire early in the fifth century, are symbolized by a volcanic mountain
+cast into the sea and spreading its streams of molten lava in every
+direction. The fearful pest of Mohammedanism is a dense smoke issuing
+from the bottomless pit and darkening the heavens. The Saracens of
+Mahomet are swarms of locusts appearing upon the earth, with scorpion
+stings, tormenting men five months, or, prophetically, one hundred and
+fifty years. On the other hand, a church is a candle-stick; its pastor,
+a beautiful star; the whole church, a virgin bride; the glorious
+assembly of God's reformers, a rainbow angel, etc.
+
+From the foregoing it will be seen that symbols are not words, but
+things, chosen because of some analagous resemblance to represent other
+things; and by a careful study of the nature of the symbols themselves
+we can ascertain where to look for their fulfilment. In the present work
+no attempt has been made to prove the interpretations given merely by
+the authority of learned names (for they can be arrayed on every side of
+a passage), but the nature of the symbols themselves has been developed;
+and the reader will be able to judge how nearly the known laws of
+symbolic language have been followed.
+
+It will be necessary, however, to notice another exception to the rules
+given, although it can scarcely be said to form an exception--it rather
+proves the very position taken. Undoubtedly, there are some few objects
+whose nature forbids their symbolization, there being no object in
+existence of analagous character that can be chosen as their
+representative. God, evidently, can not be symbolized; for where is the
+individual in heaven or on earth that can stand as his representative?
+"To whom then will ye liken God? or what likeness will ye compare unto
+him?" Isa. 40:18. Man can not represent him, angels can not; for
+whenever they appear on the panoramic scene, they denote distinguished
+agencies among men. There may be certain symbols connected with his
+person, setting forth his divine attributes and proclaiming the eternal
+majesty of his name; but he himself is described as "One sitting upon a
+throne," before whom the created intelligences of earth and heaven fall
+down and worship unceasingly, but no symbol of Him is given. The same
+exception also applies to the person of Jesus, our Savior and Redeemer.
+While the human aspect of the Savior, as exhibited during the
+incarnation in his sacrificial death, may be properly symbolized by a
+lamb, as in chap. V, there is no created intelligence in God's great
+universe that can be chosen to represent, in his true, essential
+divinity, Him who does not deem it robbery to claim equality with God.
+There may, likewise, be certain symbols connected with his person to
+give us at least a faint impression of his divine character and infinite
+majesty; yet when he appears upon the symbolic scene, he distinctly
+announces, "I am the first and the last: I am he that liveth, and was
+dead; and, behold, I am alive forevermore." "He hath on his vesture and
+on his thigh a name written, KING OF KINGS, AND LORD OF LORDS." So
+whenever the divine Christ appears on the symbolic scene, he comes in
+his own person, proclaiming his own name, and we need look for no symbol
+of him.
+
+Upon the opening of the fifth seal, the souls of the martyrs are
+represented as crying unto God from the altar for the avenging of their
+blood on those who dwell on the earth. Where is there an object in all
+creation analagous to a disembodied spirit? None can be found. It is
+easy to give them an arbitrary name; therefore they appear in the
+Revelation under their own appropriate title, as "the _souls_ of them
+that were slain." Chap. 6:9, 10, also 20:4.
+
+This exception applies to every case where no corresponding object can
+be selected as a symbol. Where the nature of the subject forbids its
+symbolization, there the description must of necessity be literal, and
+all such objects appear under their own appropriate titles. Otherwise,
+we are to look upon the entire book of Revelation as a vast collection
+of symbols whose interpretation is to be found, not in the department
+from which they are taken, but in another, to which they bear a certain
+analagous resemblance.
+
+Although not pertaining strictly to the subject of symbolic language,
+yet a word respecting the plan of the prophecy will be appropriate at
+this time. The prophetic events are not arranged after the ordinary plan
+of histories, narrating all the contemporaneous events in a given
+period, whether civil, religious, literary, scientific, or biographical,
+thus finishing up the history of that period; but it consists of a
+number of distinct themes running over the same ground. The proof of
+this assertion will appear as we proceed with the development of the
+prophecies.
+
+May the wisdom of heaven direct us in the perusal of this wonderful book
+of Revelation, and may we at last be "accounted worthy to obtain that
+world," and the glorious privilege of rendering eternal praise to "Him
+that sitteth upon the throne," "upholding all things by the word of his
+power," "declaring the end from the beginning," and revealing his mighty
+works unto the children of men.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+ The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave unto him, to show
+ unto his servants things which must shortly come to pass; and he
+ sent and signified it by his angel unto his servant John:
+
+ 2. Who bare record of the word of God, and of the testimony of
+ Jesus Christ, and of all things that he saw.
+
+ 3. Blessed is he that readeth, and they that hear the words of
+ this prophecy, and keep those things which are written therein:
+ for the time is at hand.
+
+This book of the Revelation is frequently styled the Apocalypse, derived
+from the word by which it is designated in Greek. Jesus Christ having
+received it from God, its author, designed it for the future benefit of
+his church, and communicated it to his servants by the hand of the
+beloved apostle John. Its character is described by its title
+"Revelation," which signifies something revealed or made known; and its
+object was to "show unto his servants things which must shortly come to
+pass." This object of God's in delivering the Revelation to his church
+should be a sufficient refutation of the popular theory that this book
+is unintelligible, and its varied symbols wrapped in such deep mystery
+that their meaning can not be evolved; for it is not consonant with the
+supreme power and wisdom of the God-head to suppose that, in making a
+revelation to man, he would make the fatal mistake of clothing his
+language with a mystery that defies the intellect of mortals to unveil.
+It is said of the things herein revealed that they "must shortly come to
+pass," by which is meant not that they were all to be completely
+fulfilled within a short time, but that the series of special events
+predicted were soon to begin. Thus, we speak of a century or eternity as
+near at hand, by which we mean that the events of the period spoken of
+are about to commence, although the end of the series may be very far
+off.
+
+But who are "his servants"? For whose benefit was the Revelation given?
+Surely it was for all those who become children of God by faith in
+Christ Jesus, from the beginning of the gospel dispensation when it was
+given, until the end of time; for a benediction is pronounced upon _all_
+those who read and hear its prophecies and "keep those things which are
+written therein." It was this promised blessing unto the earnest
+inquirers into the truths of Revelation that enabled the writer to
+decide to give these prophecies the consideration that is justly their
+due, and to recognize their infinite importance to the present church;
+"for the time is at hand" that will close the series of events herein
+predicted and usher in eternity. Every fulfilment of prophecy brings
+with it new duties, and enjoins fresh responsibilities upon the people
+of God; yea, "every revolving century, every closing year, adds to the
+urgency with which attention is challenged to the concluding portion of
+Holy Writ." Daniel prophetically described some of the events contained
+also in the Apocalypse, but he was told to shut up the words and seal
+the book _until_ the time of the end, when "many shall run to and fro,
+and knowledge shall be increased."
+
+It has been a matter of conjecture as to who the angel or messenger was
+that Christ sent to deliver the prophecies to John. Some suppose it to
+have been Gabriel, because of his having been a chosen instrument to
+deliver similar prophecies to Daniel. Some think it was Elijah, he
+having been translated that he should not see death, and afterwards
+appearing on the mount of transfiguration. Others think it was one of
+the redeemed sons of earth; because afterward, when rejecting the
+worship John was about to tender him, he says, "See thou do it not: I am
+thy fellow-servant, and of thy brethren that have the testimony of
+Jesus: worship God." Chaps. 19:10; 22:9. But we can not identify this
+messenger positively, as no definite information is given. To these
+revelations received John bore a faithful record of all things that he
+_saw_, implying the fact that they passed in vision before him and he
+beheld them as in a picture.
+
+ 4. JOHN to the seven churches which are in Asia: Grace be unto
+ you, and peace, from him which is, and which was, and which is
+ to come; and from the seven Spirits which are before his throne;
+
+ 5. And from Jesus Christ, who is the faithful witness, and the
+ first begotten of the dead, and the prince of the kings of the
+ earth. Unto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in
+ his own blood,
+
+ 6. And hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father;
+ to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen.
+
+ 7. Behold, he cometh with clouds; and every eye shall see him,
+ and they also which pierced him: and all kindreds of the earth
+ shall wail because of him. Even so, Amen.
+
+ 8. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending, saith the
+ Lord, which is, and which was, and which is to come, the
+ Almighty.
+
+The Apocalypse opens with the salutation of John to the seven churches
+in Asia, unto whom it was particularly addressed, and for whom special
+messages were prepared. There were other congregations of the church of
+God in Asia, or Asia Minor, besides the seven to whom the Revelation was
+sent, such as Colosse, Miletus, Troas, etc. Why only seven were
+addressed, we do not know, unless it be that the number seven is used,
+as elsewhere in the Sacred Volume, to denote fulness or completeness,
+being, as has been said, "a kind of memorial of the great facts of the
+first seven days of time which have divided all ages into cycles of
+weeks." So when we read of Christ's walking in the midst of the seven
+churches, we are to understand that he is in all the congregations of
+his people; and the ministers of the seven churches who are upheld by
+the Lord himself are representative, in one important sense at least, of
+the entire Christian ministry; for Christ has promised to be with them
+alway "even unto the end of the world." Mat. 28:20.
+
+This salutation of John's is one of great beauty and splendor, setting
+forth, as it does, the divine attributes of the great Jehovah in a
+striking manner as he "which is, and which was, and which is to come,"
+an expression embracing eternity and designating the eternal,
+unchangeable God. The seven spirits before his throne describe the third
+person in the Trinity, as will appear clearer hereafter, seven being
+used as a sacred or perfect number designating his dignity and
+excellence. Some have supposed that seven angelic spirits were here
+described; but it is not consistent with the honor due the God-head to
+suppose that created intelligences should be exalted to a plane of
+equality with the supreme Deity. Moreover, they would probably have been
+described as seven _angels_, and not as seven _spirits_.
+
+Jesus Christ is mentioned next and more fully described, he being the
+direct author of the Revelation. He is "the first begotten of the dead,
+the prince of the kings of the earth," and the one "that loved us, and
+washed us from our sins in his own blood." The statement that Christ is
+the "first-begotten of the dead," is parallel to similar expressions in
+the Bible, where he is declared to be "the first-fruits of them that
+slept," "and the first-born from the dead." Though others had been
+restored to life before the resurrection of Christ, yet he was the first
+to rise with an immortal, glorified body. These expressions may also
+denote that Christ was the chief or central figure among all those who
+arose. But it was by virtue of his coming and of his victory over death
+that any were enabled to rise before his resurrection, as in the mind
+and purpose of God, who "calleth those things which be not as though
+they were" (Rom. 4:17), Christ was ordained to die and rise again, from
+the foundation of the world. He is the "prince of the kings of the
+earth" by virtue of his being exalted to the right hand of God, with
+"angels and authorities and powers being made subject unto him." 1 Pet.
+3:22. "Far above all principality, and power, and might, and dominion,
+and every name that is named, not only in this world, but also in that
+which is to come." Eph. 1:21.
+
+"Unto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own blood,"
+describes the great atonement work of Jesus Christ, by which we are
+cleansed from all sin and made a royal, kingly priesthood unto God even
+in this world. Every soul that has received the blessed experience John
+here describes will be able to appreciate the unbounded rapture the
+beloved apostle felt in the contemplation of this wonderful theme of
+redemption that caused him to ascribe to God, its author, "glory and
+dominion forever and ever."
+
+This Jesus is he who will come again, not in humiliation and suffering,
+but in glory and honor; not as a Lamb to shed his blood for the sins of
+the world, but as the Lion of the tribe of Juda, with infinite power and
+majesty, causing all the kindreds of earth to wail because of him. The
+blasphemous Jews, who clamored for his crucifixion; Pilate, who
+delivered him up; and the Roman soldiery, who drove the nails and
+pierced his side, producing a death of greatest ignominy--all will see
+him when he comes. But while the proud enemies of God and the cruel
+oppressors of his saints are overwhelmed with terror at the sight of His
+person, the saints of all ages will shout for joy, saying, "Even so.
+Amen." "The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether." In
+the face of this awful truth, how dare men assert that the second advent
+will usher in a thousand years of peace and tranquility, during which
+time the wicked will lie in their graves, when God's word declares that
+_every eye_ shall see him when he comes?
+
+The present description of Christ closes with the statement that he is
+the Alpha and the Omega, which, being the first and last letters of the
+Greek alphabet, mean the same as "the beginning and the ending"; while
+the whole concludes with the statement that he is the one "which is, and
+which was, and which is to come, the Almighty"--which is the same as the
+description given of God in verse 4. Nothing in addition to this could
+be ascribed to Christ. Every attribute with which the Deity himself is
+invested is here ascribed to Jesus Christ. If our Savior is anything
+more than this description declares him to be, it is beyond the reach of
+our finite minds to comprehend. The sacred writers everywhere speak of
+him as a being worthy of worship and praise; and this fact, taken in
+connection with the universal proneness of men to take the honor from
+God and to give it to those who are no gods, is a convincing proof that
+Christ is God and, as such, is worthy of all honor and praise; and
+nowhere is there given in regard to Christ a warning caution such as
+John received from the angel at whose feet he fell to worship--"See thou
+do it not ... worship God."
+
+ 9. I John, who also am your brother, and companion in
+ tribulation, and in the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ,
+ was in the isle that is called Patmos, for the word of God, and
+ for the testimony of Jesus Christ.
+
+ 10. I was in the Spirit on the Lord's day, and heard behind me a
+ great voice, as of a trumpet,
+
+ 11. Saying, I am Alpha and Omega, the first and the last: and,
+ What thou seest, write in a book, and send it unto the seven
+ churches which are in Asia; unto Ephesus, and unto Smyrna, and
+ unto Pergamos, and unto Thyatira, and unto Sardis, and unto
+ Philadelphia, and unto Laodicea.
+
+At the time the Revelation was given, John was a prisoner in the Isle of
+Patmos (now called Patmo or Patino), a small, desolate, rocky island in
+the Aegean sea, near the coast of Asia Minor, its greatest length from
+north to south being about ten miles, and its greatest breadth six. To
+this lonely place, according to Jerome and others, John was exiled
+during the reign of the tyrant Domitian, in A.D. 95. The reason of his
+banishment is given--"For the word of God, and for the testimony of
+Jesus Christ." Having confined him to this barren spot, the emperor no
+doubt thought he had effectually cleared the world of this preacher of
+righteousness. Doubtless the persecutors of John Bunyan[2] thought the
+same when they had him shut up in Bedford jail. But when men think the
+truth is dead and buried out of sight, God suddenly gives it a
+resurrection with thirty-fold greater glory. It was so in this case. The
+giving of the book of Revelation--the writing on this spot of the
+history of the church in advance--has changed the name of this rocky
+island from deepest infamy to one of sacred interest and holy
+recollections. The death of Domitian occurred in A.D. 96, and his
+successor, the humane Nerva, recalled those who had been exiled because
+of their faithfulness to Christianity; and John returned to Ephesus,
+where he spent the remainder of his days, dying a natural death at the
+advanced age of about one hundred years.
+
+[Footnote 2: John Bunyan (1628-1688) was a Puritan. After the
+restoration of the Stuarts to the throne, at the close of the English
+Revolution and the failure of the Commonwealth, he was imprisoned for
+twelve years "on account of non-conformity to the established worship."
+It was during this dreary confinement that he wrote his "Pilgrim's
+Progress," the most admirable allegory in English literature.]
+
+The humble manner in which John speaks of himself is affectionate. He
+does not represent himself to the churches as some great apostle or
+prophet, but as "your brother and companion in tribulation," a sharer
+with them in the trials and the persecutions that they were all called
+upon to endure. He also testified that he was "in the kingdom and
+patience of Christ," of which we will speak more hereafter.
+
+It was on the first day of the week, or the Lord's day, that the vision
+recorded in this chapter was given John, while he was "in the Spirit,"
+or under the influence of the spirit of prophecy. He was commanded to
+write in a book the things that he saw and to send it unto the seven
+churches of Asia. It is important to bear in mind the fact that these
+visions are things that John _saw_, all the actors and events passing
+before him as a moving panorama--the most stupendous scene that human
+eyes have ever beheld, containing the future political history of
+various nations and kingdoms and also the history of the church in her
+different phases from the beginning until the final consummation. Of the
+seven churches we will speak more particularly hereafter.
+
+ 12. And I turned to see the voice that spake with me. And being
+ turned, I saw seven golden candlesticks;
+
+ 13. And in the midst of the seven candlesticks one like unto the
+ Son of man, clothed with a garment down to the foot, and girt
+ about the paps with a golden girdle.
+
+ 14. His head and his hairs were white like wool, as white as
+ snow; and his eyes were as a flame of fire;
+
+ 15. And his feet like unto fine brass, as if they burned in a
+ furnace; and his voice as the sound of many waters.
+
+ 16. And he had in his right hand seven stars: and out of his
+ mouth went a sharp two-edged sword: and his countenance was as
+ the sun shineth in his strength.
+
+ 17. And when I saw him, I fell at his feet as dead. And he laid
+ his right hand upon me, saying unto me, Fear not; I am the first
+ and the last:
+
+ 18. I am he that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am alive
+ for evermore, Amen; and have the keys of hell and of death.
+
+The hieroglyphic, or symbolic, characters now begin. Turning in the
+direction from which the voice came, John saw seven beautiful
+candle-sticks and standing in their midst, a personage whose appearance
+was inexpressibly glorious. John had recognized the voice of Christ
+announcing "I am the first and the last," but he was not prepared for
+the sight that met his gaze when he turned and found himself in the
+immediate presence of his August Majesty, the Son of God. A human form
+was there, but clothed in such vestments as proclaimed God; and no
+wonder mortality was overwhelmed when ushered into the presence of the
+uncreated Deity--he whose feet glowed as brass in a furnace, whose eyes
+were as a flame of fire, and whose voice was as the sound of many
+waters. Any man would have fallen as dead before such a personage as is
+here described. Men may talk atheism, but it is the atheism of the lips
+and of a coward heart, an atheism that would flee appalled before the
+burning footsteps of the Deity, and the irresistible conclusion would
+be, "It is God himself."
+
+John was not left in doubt regarding the identity of this personage;
+for, laying his hand upon the prostrate form of the apostle, he said,
+"Fear not; I am the first and the last: I am he that liveth, and was
+dead; and, behold, I am alive forevermore, Amen; and have the keys of
+hell and of death." The ever-living One entered death's domains and
+permitted himself to be bound with chains; but at his pleasure he broke
+them asunder, conquered death, and rose triumphant, carrying with him
+the keys of hell and of death; and he has ascended on high, alive
+forevermore; and at his voice all the dead will arise at his appearing,
+for the grave can no longer hold its victims.
+
+This vision settles an important fact--that when Christ appears upon the
+panoramic scene, he comes in his own person, and not in the character of
+a created substitute. There may be symbols connected with his
+person--the sword of his mouth may signify vengeance upon his enemies;
+his eyes as a flame of fire, superior intelligence and penetrating
+vision, etc.--but he distinctly announces himself to be the Christ of
+God. There is no creature in the universe that could personate "him that
+liveth, and was dead, but is alive forevermore."
+
+ 19. Write the things which thou hast seen, and the things which
+ are, and the things which shall be hereafter;
+
+ 20. The mystery of the seven stars which thou sawest in my right
+ hand, and the seven golden candlesticks. The seven stars are the
+ angels of the seven churches: and the seven candlesticks which
+ thou sawest are the seven churches.
+
+Here John received a special commission to write the things of the
+future that were to be given, the things that were then taking place,
+and also certain events which had come under his personal observation
+during his life-time, and which were also included in the symbolic
+visions, thus covering the entire gospel dispensation.
+
+The special symbols employed in this introductory vision are here
+explained by Christ himself, thus leaving us in no doubt whatever. A
+star is a fit symbol of the position of a Christian minister--set in the
+church to give the light of the gospel of Jesus Christ to the world;
+while a candle-stick fitly represents the congregation working with him
+and sustaining him in his position. The special power of
+Christ--symbolized by his right hand--is manifested in upholding his
+ministers, while he walks in the midst of his churches, ready with the
+sword of his mouth to defend them from the attacks of their adversaries
+and to prove their constant Guardian and Protector.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+ Unto the angel of the church of Ephesus write; These things
+ saith he that holdeth the seven stars in his right hand, who
+ walketh in the midst of the seven golden candlesticks;
+
+ 2. I know thy works, and thy labor, and thy patience, and how
+ thou canst not bear them which are evil: and thou hast tried
+ them which say they are apostles, and are not, and hast found
+ them liars:
+
+ 3. And hast borne, and hast patience, and for my name's sake
+ hast labored, and hast not fainted.
+
+ 4. Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee, because thou hast
+ left thy first love.
+
+ 5. Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent,
+ and do the first works; or else I will come unto thee quickly,
+ and will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except thou
+ repent.
+
+ 6. But this thou hast, that thou hatest the deeds of the
+ Nicolaitanes, which I also hate.
+
+ 7. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+ the churches; To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the
+ tree of life, which is in the midst of the paradise of God.
+
+The special messages to the seven churches of Asia Minor are not of such
+thrilling interest as are the symbolic visions of the remainder of the
+book, yet we can learn many beneficial lessons from the various
+experiences of these congregations.
+
+At the time the Revelation was given, Ephesus was the chief capital of
+Proconsular Asia and its pride and glory. It was also that country's
+chief mart of idolatry, containing, as it did, the magnificent temple of
+Diana, which is reckoned as one of the seven wonders of the world. This
+temple, according to the disclosures of modern excavations, was four
+hundred and eighteen feet in length, and two hundred and thirty-nine in
+width, with one hundred beautiful external pillars of Parian marble,
+each a single shaft about fifty-six feet high. The city was proud of the
+title it had received, "Servant of the Goddess," and even the Roman
+emperors vied with wealthy natives in lavishing gifts to her. One of the
+latter, named Vibius Salutaris, presented a large quantity of gold and
+silver images to be carried annually in procession.
+
+In this proud, wealthy, idolatrous city the apostle Paul planted a
+Christian church, and the great inroads the gospel made into the
+prevalent system of idolatry is shown by one circumstance mentioned in
+the Book of Acts. "And many that believed came, and confessed, and
+showed their deeds. Many of them also which used curious arts brought
+their books together, and burned them before all men: and they counted
+the price of them, and found it fifty thousand pieces of silver. So
+mightily grew the word of God and prevailed." Acts 19:18-20. Fifty
+thousand pieces of silver would be equal to ten thousand dollars' worth,
+or, according to some estimates, six times that amount. But ten thousand
+dollars' worth of books on incantation and magic alone destroyed,
+considering the scarcity of books in that day, shows the wondrous extent
+to which the gospel had been accepted. This was made the occasion of a
+great tumult in the city, when one, Demetrius, seeing that the prestige
+of Diana was diminishing, stirred up the people of the city against Paul
+and his companions, and cried vehemently, "Great is Diana of the
+Ephesians!" The souvenir silver shrines and images of this goddess,
+which had been in such demand by the multitudes of people constantly
+visiting the city, were no longer sought for when the knowledge of the
+one true God was made known; and well might Demetrius and his
+fellow-craftsmen be alarmed as their means of wealth disappeared.
+
+The spiritual condition of this church in Paul's time is worthy of
+notice; for it presents a striking contrast with its condition at the
+time when the special message of the Revelation was addressed to it.
+Paul in his epistle to the Ephesians taught them the glorious doctrine
+of entire sanctification (chap. 5:25-27), and they had received the
+experience; for he gives them the express command, "Grieve not the holy
+Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption." Chap.
+4:30. And again, "After that ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy
+Spirit of promise." Chap. 1:13. Their ministers, also, had been placed
+in their position by authority of the Holy Ghost, and were commanded to
+feed the flock. See Acts 20:28. When this was their heavenly experience,
+their "first works" of patience, love, and perseverance, were acceptable
+unto Christ; but it was not their present condition. A sad declension
+had taken place; therefore the declaration, "I have somewhat against
+thee, because thou hast left thy first love." This was no mere human
+estimate placed upon their piety, but it was their condition as Christ
+himself knew it to be. He "who walketh in the midst of the seven golden
+candlesticks," and knoweth the hearts of all men, declared they had
+fallen, and commanded them to repent and to do the first works. How sad
+that a congregation which had one time enjoyed the fulness of God's
+favor should fall from grace and be threatened with destruction by the
+Lord himself! But there is one consolation to be obtained from the
+experience of this church, and that is, that even if persons have
+enjoyed an experience of pardon and of sanctification and have lost it,
+there is a possibility of their recovering the favor of God, provided
+they "repent, and do the first works."
+
+But Christ, who in chapter 1:5 is said to be "the faithful witness,"
+will not overlook anything that is good, nor censure a congregation
+unjustly. He finds in this church one fact worthy of commendation--their
+abhorrence of the deeds of the Nicolaitans. The infamous practises
+attributed to this party are promiscuous sexual intercourse and the
+eating of things sacrificed to idols. It is said to have derived its
+name from Nicolas, a proselyte of Antioch, who was one of the seven
+deacons appointed by the church at Jerusalem, Acts 6:5. But there is no
+satisfactory evidence that Nicolas was its founder; and it is the belief
+of many, that the sect attributed their origin to him simply to gain the
+prestige of his name. However, its mention in this connection is
+sufficient proof that at this time those corrupt principles had been
+widely promulgated.
+
+The letter closes with an admonition and a promise--an admonition to
+give heed to the things uttered by the Spirit, and a promise of
+everlasting life to the overcomer. This shows that Christ does not
+approve or condemn indiscriminately. If the great mass of professors
+continue in their backslidden condition, the individual that gives heed
+to God's Word and is made an overcomer will have a right to "the tree of
+life, which is in the midst of the paradise of God."
+
+What, may we ask, has been the fate of this church against which Christ
+uttered the threat of removal? There is no proof that they gave heed to
+the exhortation to repent, and the candle-stick has long since been
+taken away. Not a vestige of a church remains to mark the site of this
+once important congregation; nay, the city itself is no more, the stork,
+the jackal, and a few miserable Turkish huts alone remaining on the site
+of this once proud metropolis where thousands congregated and cried,
+"Great is Diana of the Ephesians!"
+
+ 8. And unto the angel of the church in Smyrna write; These
+ things saith the first and the last which was dead, and is
+ alive;
+
+ 9. I know thy works, and tribulation, and poverty, (but thou art
+ rich) and I know the blasphemy of them which say they are Jews,
+ and are not, but are the synagogue of Satan.
+
+ 10. Fear none of those things which thou shalt suffer: behold,
+ the devil shall cast some of you into prison, that ye may be
+ tried; and ye shall have tribulation ten days: be thou faithful
+ unto death, and I will give thee a crown of life.
+
+ 11. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+ the churches; He that overcometh shall not be hurt of the second
+ death.
+
+Smyrna was situated on a bay of the Aegean Sea, its beautiful harbor
+rendering it from time immemorial one of the most important commercial
+cities of Asia Minor. History does not inform us when the gospel was
+first introduced in this city; but at a very early date a large
+congregation existed there, with the venerable Polycarp as its pastor.
+He suffered death by martyrdom under the reign of Marcus Aurelius about
+A.D. 167.
+
+In each of the seven letters to the churches Christ introduces himself
+by some appellation significant of the character he assumes toward them.
+In this he styles himself "the first and the last, which was dead, and
+is alive," a fact very important for that congregation to remember
+during the great seasons of persecution and oppression through which
+they were to be called to pass.
+
+Against this church Christ has no words of condemnation to utter; all is
+encouragement and promise. Their condition of poverty is mentioned. It
+is probable that this very poverty arose because of their accepting
+Christianity and taking joyfully the spoiling of their goods; for it is
+a well-known fact that, when individuals embrace Christianity in an
+idolatrous land, they are disinherited by parents, cast out by
+relatives, and denied public employment. Even the community refuses to
+associate with them or to render them assistance in any form. Their
+means of subsistence is thus cut off, and they are harassed in every
+possible manner. Perhaps this is the very trial of poverty the church of
+Smyrna passed through; but Christ declares that they are rich: yea, God
+hath "chosen the poor of this world rich in faith, and heirs of the
+kingdom which he hath promised to them that love him." Jas. 2:5. Their
+enemies may think that they have reduced them to a condition of
+wretchedness, but in this the persecutors are mistaken. God says the
+righteous are rich. A certain writer has remarked, "There is many a rich
+poor man, and many a poor rich man."
+
+The blasphemy of opposing, self-styled Jews is next mentioned. In all
+probability the term _Jew_ is applied in its spiritual sense. Paul
+declares that "he is not a Jew which is one outwardly ... but he is a
+Jew which is one inwardly" (Rom. 2:28, 29), and that "if ye be Christ's,
+then are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise." Gal.
+3:29. These persons professed to belong to the true "Israel of God"
+(Gal. 6:16), but they were without salvation; and the Smyrnaen church
+would not recognize them as belonging to the congregation, and therefore
+the only name that could be applied to them was "the synagogue of
+Satan." Had they been tolerated in the assembly of the righteous, Christ
+would have condemned or rebuked the church for not performing their
+duty, the same as he did the churches of Pergamos and Thyatira.
+
+Great persecutions for the church of Smyrna are predicted; but he "which
+was dead, and is alive forevermore," having passed through the ordeal of
+suffering and death himself, stands in a position to speak words of
+comfort and consolation, assuring them in the strongest terms that,
+although wicked men and the devil may cast them into prison and
+persecute them unto the death, yet "he that overcometh shall not be hurt
+of the second death." The overcomers are of the number of those who,
+having had "part in the first resurrection, on such the second death
+hath no power." Chap. 20:6. The ten days doubtless are prophetic time
+(which will be explained later) and signify ten years, which was
+probably fulfilled in the terrible persecution that began under the
+reign of Diocletian, and continued ten years, or from A.D. 302 to 312.
+
+The subsequent history of Smyrna has been different from that of
+Ephesus, in that it has retained its name and importance until the
+present day, being the greatest commercial city in the Levant. It has a
+population of more than two hundred thousand, several thousand of whom
+belong to the Greek and Armenian churches. The light there has become
+dimmed, but let us pray that God will soon remember the faith and
+perseverance of his ancient servants and again trim the lamps that once
+shone so brightly.
+
+ 12. And to the angel of the church in Pergamos write; These
+ things saith he which hath the sharp sword with two edges;
+
+ 13. I know thy works, and where thou dwellest, even where
+ Satan's seat is: and thou holdest fast my name, and hast not
+ denied my faith, even in those days wherein Antipas was my
+ faithful martyr, who was slain among you, where Satan dwelleth.
+
+ 14. But I have a few things against thee, because thou hast
+ there them that hold the doctrine of Balaam, who taught Balac to
+ cast a stumbling-block before the children of Israel, to eat
+ things sacrificed unto idols, and to commit fornication.
+
+ 15. So hast thou also them that hold the doctrine of the
+ Nicolaitanes, which thing I hate.
+
+ 16. Repent; or else I will come unto thee quickly, and will
+ fight against them with the sword of my mouth.
+
+ 17. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+ the churches; To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the
+ hidden manna, and will give him a white stone, and in the stone
+ a new name written, which no man knoweth saving he that
+ receiveth it.
+
+Pergamos was a city of considerable importance, the ancient metropolis
+of the province of Mysia and the residence of the Attalian kings.
+
+The description here given of Christ is in accordance with the character
+of the church addressed and the work he found necessary to perform in
+it. They are said to be located "where Satan's seat is." Pergamos was a
+city reputed to be "sacred to the gods" and was one of the headquarters
+of idolatry. There are numerous such cities now among the Hindoos and
+other idolatrous nations. These cities are regarded with peculiar
+veneration and sanctity, and they contain the most honored temples. In
+the midst of such surroundings the influences against Christianity would
+be very great.
+
+The congregation is commended because of its loyalty and steadfastness
+during a period of persecution in which Antipas was slain. When this
+persecution occurred, we are not informed; and as to the identity of
+Antipas, we are also left in uncertainty. Some suppose him to have been
+the elder of the church.
+
+Christ censures them severely, however, for tolerating persons in their
+midst who held the doctrine of Balaam and the pernicious sentiments of
+the Nicolaitans, and he threatens to fight against them with the sword
+of his mouth unless they repent. The doctrine of Balaam is partly
+explained--he "taught Balak to cast a stumbling-block before the
+children of Israel, to eat things sacrificed unto idols, and to commit
+fornication." When Balak desired Balaam to pronounce a curse against
+Israel, God by various means miraculously prevented Balaam's doing so;
+but Balaam craftily instructed Balak to make use of the women of Moab to
+seduce the men of Israel to sacrifice to their idols and to indulge in
+the licentious accompaniments to such idolatry. In many places in
+heathen countries to-day vile women are attached to the temples of the
+gods, and at certain stated feasts licentiousness becomes a sanctioned
+part of the religious celebration. Balaam's plan was successful. God was
+displeased with Israel, and because of this fornication there fell in
+one day twenty-four thousand. For a full account see Num. 22-25;
+31:13-17.
+
+It would appear that the doctrine of Balaam and the doctrine of the
+Nicolaitans were classed as two different heresies; but the corrupt
+tenets of the latter were identical with those of the former, and the
+probable meaning is, "As the Hebrews had Balaamites among them; so,
+likewise, you have among you the Nicolaitans teaching the same
+pernicious doctrines." It is also a singular fact that the Hebrew
+signification of Balaam and the Greek of Nicolas is the same--"subduer
+of the people." Thus the doctrine of Balaam would stand as a
+representation of the principles taught by the Nicolaitans.
+
+The letter to this church also closes with an exhortation and a promise.
+Hidden manna and a white stone in which is inscribed a new name are
+rewarded the overcomer. The interpretations of this white stone have
+been various, but the difficulty seems to lie in determining which
+ancient custom is meant. The most satisfactory to my mind is that
+contained in the following account by Mr. Blunt:
+
+"In primitive times, when traveling was rendered difficult from want of
+places of public entertainment, hospitality was exercised by private
+individuals to a very great extent, of which, indeed, we find frequent
+traces in all history, and in none more than in the Old Testament.
+Persons who partook of this hospitality, and those who practised it,
+frequently contracted habits of friendship and regard for each other,
+and it became a well-established custom among the Greeks and Romans to
+provide their guests with some particular mark, which was handed down
+from father to son, and insured hospitality and kind treatment whenever
+it was presented. This mark was usually a small stone or pebble, cut in
+halves, upon each of which the host and the guest mutually inscribed
+their names, and then interchanged with each other. The production of
+these stones was quite sufficient to insure friendship for themselves or
+descendants whenever they traveled again in the same direction; while it
+is evident that these stones required to be privately kept, and the
+names written upon them carefully concealed, lest others should obtain
+the privileges instead of the persons for whom they were intended." So
+those who have obtained salvation and are overcomers through the blood
+have received the sure pledge of Christ's eternal friendship (which
+those who know not God can not receive) and are invited to partake of
+all of his hospitalities, even to "eat of the hidden manna," which is
+experienced by the truly sanctified.
+
+ 18. And unto the angel of the church in Thyatira write; These
+ things saith the Son of God, who hath his eyes like unto a flame
+ of fire, and his feet are like fine brass;
+
+ 19. I know thy works, and charity, and service, and faith, and
+ thy patience, and thy works; and the last to be more than the
+ first.
+
+ 20. Notwithstanding I have a few things against thee, because
+ thou sufferest that woman Jezebel, which calleth herself a
+ prophetess, to teach and to seduce my servants to commit
+ fornication, and to eat things sacrificed unto idols.
+
+ 21. And I gave her space to repent of her fornication; and she
+ repented not.
+
+ 22. Behold, I will cast her into a bed, and them that commit
+ adultery with her into great tribulation, except they repent of
+ their deeds.
+
+ 23. And I will kill her children with death; and all the
+ churches shall know that I am he which searcheth the reins and
+ hearts: and I will give unto every one of you according to your
+ works.
+
+ 24. But unto you I say, and unto the rest in Thyatira, as many
+ as have not this doctrine, and which have not known the depths
+ of Satan, as they speak; I will put upon you none other burden.
+
+ 25. But that which ye have already hold fast till I come.
+
+ 26. And he that overcometh, and keepeth my works unto the end,
+ to him will I give power over the nations:
+
+ 27. And he shall rule them with a rod of iron; as the vessels of
+ a potter shall they be broken to shivers: even as I received of
+ my Father.
+
+ 28. And I will give him the morning star.
+
+ 29. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+ the churches.
+
+To this congregation Christ manifests himself in the character of him
+"who hath his eyes like unto a flame of fire, and his feet like fine
+brass," denoting the fact that he is the great discerner of all hearts
+and that he is able to render unto every man according to his deeds.
+Whether the expression, "his feet like fine brass," has any particular
+signification, I am unable to say.
+
+This letter opens with a commendation of the works, the charity, the
+service, and the faith of this church. In these things they had made
+considerable advancement. Nevertheless, Christ had something against
+them, because they had suffered "that woman Jezebel" to teach false
+doctrines and to seduce the servants of Christ to compromise with
+idolatry and to commit fornication. It is improbable that Jezebel was
+her real name; but she was a Jezebel in character, named in this letter
+after King Ahab's wicked wife, who killed the Lord's prophets, seduced
+her husband into idolatry, and fed the priests of Baal at her own table.
+Some have supposed that this appellation designated a number or class of
+people teaching these doctrines; but the manner in which "her children,"
+or disciples, are spoken of would seem rather to point out a particular
+woman--one who was a leader and the chief instrument of mischief.
+
+The long-suffering of Christ had been manifested in this case. He had
+given her an opportunity to repent of her evil deeds, but she would not.
+Now he declares that he will cause his judgments to descend upon her and
+her followers. By casting her into a bed is doubtless meant that he
+would bring her down upon a bed of sickness and pain and thus make her a
+most distressing object. Her partners in sin were to suffer "great
+tribulation," and "her children," or disciples, he would kill with
+death, or deadly pestilence. Thus would this whole corrupt party be
+visited with divine judgments according to their works; while their
+great pretensions to wisdom and discernment, "as they speak," or as they
+term it, will be shown to be nothing but the "depths of Satan."
+
+The frequent references to these gross sins in the letters to the
+churches may seem a little strange to us in the altered circumstances of
+society in which we live; but when we consider the tone of public
+sentiment and the prevalence of idolatry at that time, it will be seen
+that the lapse into these sins was very easy. Some compromised with the
+heathen by joining in their idolatrous feasts, maintaining that the meat
+was not affected one way or the other, and this proved but a
+stepping-stone to the licentious principles and the corrupt practises of
+those with whom they thus associated.
+
+The remainder of this letter is full of encouragement to the faithful.
+The only burden Christ placed upon them was a severe censure because
+they tolerated that abominable party in their midst. They were exhorted
+to continue faithful and were promised power over the nations. These
+they should rule with a rod of iron, the same as Christ, who received
+this power from his Father. The law, or rod, with which Christ, and his
+people with him, as _kings_ and priests, rule the nations is the word of
+God, the most unyielding law, based upon the greatest authority, ever
+written. "Let the saints be joyful in glory ... let the high praises of
+God be in their mouth, and a two-edged sword in their hand; to execute
+vengeance upon the heathen, and punishments upon the people; to bind
+their kings with chains, and their nobles with fetters of iron; to
+execute upon them the _judgments written_: this honor have _all his
+saints_." Psa. 149:5-9.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+
+ And unto the angel of the church in Sardis write; These things
+ saith he that hath the seven Spirits of God, and the seven
+ stars; I know thy works, that thou hast a name that thou livest,
+ and art dead.
+
+ 2. Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain, that are
+ ready to die: for I have not found thy works perfect before God.
+
+ 3. Remember therefore how thou hast received and heard, and hold
+ fast, and repent. If therefore thou shalt not watch, I will come
+ on thee as a thief, and thou shalt not know what hour I will
+ come upon thee.
+
+ 4. Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled
+ their garments; and they shall walk with me in white: for they
+ are worthy.
+
+ 5. He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white
+ raiment; and I will not blot out his name out of the book of
+ life, but I will confess his name before my Father, and before
+ his angels.
+
+ 6. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+ the churches.
+
+Sardis was one of the chief cities of western Asia Minor. It was
+beautifully situated on the river Pactolus, in the middle Hermus valley,
+at the foot of Mount Tmolus, and was once the capital of the kingdom of
+Lydia, the place of residence of Croesus and other Lydian kings. It was
+a city of great opulence and splendor, and "distinguished for the
+voluptuous and debauched manners of its inhabitants."
+
+To this church Christ introduces himself as "he that hath the seven
+Spirits of God, and the seven stars"--that is, he has control of the
+Holy Spirit's agency and of his ministers. Thus, the great spiritual
+agencies of the church are in his keeping to bestow or to take away as
+he pleases. Considering the dead condition of this church of Sardis, it
+was very appropriate for Christ thus to address himself to them. He has
+no words of commendation to offer, no works of charity, service, faith,
+and patience of which to approve. They had works, but these were not
+"perfect before God." They were threatened with sudden visitation, as
+unexpected as a thief breaking in unawares upon the slumbering inmates
+of a dwelling in the still hours of night. Their condition was different
+from that of any of the churches before mentioned. They are not charged
+with such vile practises as prevailed at Pergamus and Thyatira, the
+doctrine of the Nicolaitans had gained no foothold among them, yet their
+works were not perfect. "Thou hast a name that thou livest, and are
+_dead_." They had maintained the external form of religion, but the
+vital power of godliness was lacking.
+
+Although Christ could not commend this church as a body, on account of
+their lack of spirituality, yet he testified, "Thou hast a few names
+even in Sardis which have not defiled their garments." In the midst of
+all the cold formalism of professors and surrounded by worldliness and
+iniquity, a few preserved their Christian integrity and were approved by
+the Lord. "Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this
+... to keep himself unspotted from the world." Jas. 1:27. All such
+overcomers have the promise of being clothed in white raiment ("the
+righteousness of saints "--chap. 19:8) and of having their names
+preserved in the "book of life" in heaven and confessed before the
+Father and the holy angels. Wondrous admission into the heavenly realm!
+Presented to the Father and the innumerable hosts of heaven _by the
+Lord, himself_, there, amid sacred environments, to enjoy the
+transcendent felicity of eternal blessedness! "They are worthy," saith
+Christ.
+
+Although this church was threatened with sudden visitation, there is no
+hint given of the manner in which this should be fulfilled, for the
+reason, perhaps, that it might be all the more unexpected. The church
+has long since passed out of existence. The city itself has lain in
+ruins for centuries, the modern village of Sart composed of a few huts
+inhabited by semi-nomadic Yuruks alone remaining near the ancient site.
+Cattle now graze on grassy plains once traversed by streets and thronged
+with the inhabitants of this superb metropolis.
+
+ 7. And to the angel of the church in Philadelphia write; These
+ things saith he that is holy, he that is true, he that hath the
+ key of David, he that openeth, and no man shutteth; and
+ shutteth, and no man openeth;
+
+ 8. I know thy works: behold, I have set before thee an open
+ door, and no man can shut it: for thou hast a little strength,
+ and hast kept my word, and hast not denied my name.
+
+ 9. Behold, I will make them of the synagogue of Satan, which say
+ they are Jews, and are not, but do lie; behold, I will make them
+ to come and worship before thy feet, and to know that I have
+ loved thee.
+
+ 10. Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I also will
+ keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all
+ the world, to try them that dwell upon the earth.
+
+ 11. Behold, I come quickly: hold that fast which thou hast, that
+ no man take thy crown.
+
+ 12. Him that overcometh will I make a pillar in the temple of my
+ God, and he shall go no more out: and I will write upon him the
+ name of my God, and the name of the city of my God, which is new
+ Jerusalem, which cometh down out of heaven from my God, and I
+ will write upon him my new name.
+
+ 13. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+ the churches.
+
+Philadelphia was once a large and powerful city, and it continued thus
+until later times. Prior to the time the Revelation was written, it had
+suffered severely from repeated earthquakes, which caused it to be
+almost deserted by its inhabitants. Subsequently, however, it recovered
+and became a prosperous, influential city.
+
+The character Christ assumes toward this church is that of the Holy and
+True--one who will justly reward them for their patience and
+perseverance--and by virtue of his possessing the key of David (a symbol
+of power and authority), he is able to place before them an open door
+which no man can shut.
+
+The character of this church is wholly unlike that of the preceding. In
+that, there was nothing to commend, but much to condemn; whereas to
+this, all is admonition, encouragement, and promise, because they had
+"kept the word of his patience" and had not denied his name. Christ knew
+their works and that they were worthy of approval. They still possessed
+"a little strength" and had not denied his name.
+
+Christ, who always upholds and rewards his faithful followers, although
+they be few in number and constitute the despised of earth, was not
+unrighteous that he should overlook this humble congregation of devoted
+disciples that had kept his word, but he made them a number of special
+promises _because_ of their faith and perseverance. The first was the
+assurance that he had set before them an open door which no man could
+shut. A door is a means either of entrance or of escape, and signifies
+that God was going to open before them a greater field of enlargement
+and success, or else would furnish them a sure means of escape and
+protection from their cruel and relentless persecutors. It will be
+remembered that the church of Smyrna also received nothing but
+commendation and encouragement; but there was no promise of an open door
+to them. On the contrary, they were told that they should be tried, cast
+into prison, and suffer tribulation ten days. They were comforted,
+however, with a certain assurance of future reward and a crown of
+everlasting life. But before the church of Philadelphia there was opened
+a scene of greater prosperity, deliverance from enemies, greater
+enlargement, and the glorious prospect of seeing multitudes of souls
+brought under the influence of the saving gospel of Christ.
+
+The next promise was that of deliverance from opposing Jews, who were to
+be humbled before them. This refers, doubtless, to persons who had a
+mere profession of Christianity and who were not recognized by the
+congregation--the same as the blaspheming Jews of Smyrna. The
+faithfulness of God's elect would eventually be the means of bringing
+them back to an experience of salvation, so that they would worship in
+the midst of the church again.
+
+Another promise to this congregation was, "I also will keep thee from
+the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world." Some
+dreadful calamity is here predicted, during which the power of God would
+be mercifully manifested in granting this church a special preservation.
+Some suppose it to have reference to a great general persecution
+throughout the Roman empire, during which the Christians of Philadelphia
+would be spared. This may have been the fact; but whether it was or not,
+we have no means of information. When we come to consider the symbols of
+chapter 9, in which the delusive error of Mohammedanism is set forth, we
+will see what a period of sore trial this delusion was to the Eastern
+churches. It is also a fact that, in the midst of this abounding heresy,
+the church of Philadelphia was preserved as was no other church of Asia.
+When the followers of Mohammed were sweeping like a whirlwind over the
+Eastern empire, ravaging everything before them, Philadelphia remained
+an independent Christian city, when _all the other_ cities of Asia Minor
+were under the power of the Saracen sword. It held out against the
+Ottoman power until the year 1390 A.D., when it surrendered to Sultan
+Bayazid's mixed army of Ottoman Turks and Byzantine Christians (?). This
+was six years after the death of Wickliffe, "the morning star of the
+reformation," who opposed the corruptions of the Papacy, gave the world
+the first English translation of the Bible, and sowed the seeds that
+soon grew and produced a Huss, a Jerome, and a Luther. So God preserved
+the Christians of Philadelphia in the East until he began raising up
+others to herald his truth in the West, whose labors soon ripened into
+the glorious Reformation of the Sixteenth Century.
+
+His final promise to the overcomer is that he shall be made a pillar in
+the temple of God, and receive the name of God, of Christ, and of the
+New Jerusalem, or city of God. In some manner the Christian is labelled
+with the name of God, whose property he is; with the name of Christ, by
+whom he was purchased; and with the name of the New Jerusalem, or city
+of God, his inheritance and eternal abiding-place; and he is made a
+pillar in the temple of God. By turning to Heb. 12:22, 23, we find that
+the general assembly and church of God in this dispensation constitutes,
+in one important sense, the New Jerusalem, or city of God, in which the
+overcomers abide. "But ye _are come_ unto Mount Sion, and unto the city
+of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem ... to the general assembly
+and church of the first-born, which are written in heaven." The church
+is also styled the house or temple of God, composed of people out of all
+nations who "are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets,
+Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner-stone; in whom all the
+building fitly framed together groweth unto _an holy temple_ in the Lord
+... for an habitation of God through the Spirit." Eph. 2:20-22. See also
+1 Cor. 3:17; 1 Pet. 2:5; 1 Tim. 3:15.
+
+To be a pillar in this temple of God means to occupy a conspicuous or
+useful position in supporting the truth, examples of which are to be
+found in such characters as "James, Cephas, and John, who seemed to be
+pillars" in the church in apostolic times. Gal. 2:9. In the last prayer
+of Christ to the Father, he says concerning his disciples, "While I was
+with them in the world, I kept them in thy name" (John 17:12); and since
+the church promised by Christ (Mat. 16:18) has been established, we
+continually bear the name of the Father, its title being the church or
+city of God. We also bear the new name of Christ, as explained in
+chapter 2:17, and we meet together and worship in that name (Mat.
+18:20), obeying the exhortation of the apostle Paul--"Whatsoever ye do
+in word or deed, do all _in the name of the Lord Jesus_, giving thanks
+to God and the Father by him." Col. 3:17. A better understanding of the
+manner in which we receive the name of God and of his city will be
+obtained when we come to the consideration of the followers of a false,
+degenerate church represented as receiving the "mark of the beast," by
+which they are designated.
+
+To inquire further into the history of this church, Philadelphia still
+remains with a population of about fifteen thousand. It contains a
+number of places of public worship, a resident (Greek) archbishop, and
+several inferior clergy. Mr. Keith, in his "Evidence of Prophecy,"
+speaks of the then presiding bishop, and says that he acknowledges "the
+Bible as the only foundation of all religious belief" and admits that
+"abuses have entered into the church, which former ages might endure,
+but the present must put down." It is also a singular coincidence that
+the modern Turkish name of the city, Ala-Shehr, signifies "city of God."
+
+This description of the church of Philadelphia I will bring to a close
+by adding the following extract from Gibbon, recorded in his noted
+history entitled "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire." It is of
+especial value since the writer, being an avowed infidel, can not be
+convicted of misconstruing historical facts in order to favor
+Christianity.
+
+"The captivity or ruin of the seven churches of Asia was consummated [by
+the Ottomans] A.D. 1312, and the barbarous lords of Ionia and Lydia
+still trample on the monuments of classic and Christian antiquity. In
+the loss of Ephesus the Christians deplore the fall of the first
+candle-stick of the Revelation. The desolation is complete; and the
+temple of Diana and the church of Mary will equally elude the search of
+the curious traveler. The circus and three stately theatres of Laodicea
+are now peopled with wolves and foxes. Sardis is reduced to a miserable
+village. The God of Mohammed without a rival is invoked in the mosques
+of Thyatira and Pergamus; and the populousness of Smyrna is supported by
+the foreign trade of the Franks and Armenians. _Philadelphia alone_ has
+been saved by prophecy or courage. At a distance from the sea, forgotten
+by the emperors, encompassed on all sides by the Turks, her valiant sons
+defended their religion and freedom above fourscore years, and at length
+capitulated with the proudest of the Ottomans. Among the Greek colonies
+of Asia, Philadelphia is still erect--a column in a scene of ruins--a
+pleasing example that the path of honor and safety may sometimes be the
+same." Vol. VI., p. 229.
+
+ 14. And unto the angel of the church of the Laodiceans write;
+ These things saith the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the
+ beginning of the creation of God;
+
+ 15. I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I
+ would thou wert cold or hot.
+
+ 16. So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot,
+ I will spue thee out of my mouth.
+
+ 17. Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods,
+ and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art
+ wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked:
+
+ 18. I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire, that
+ thou mayest be rich; and white raiment, that thou mayest be
+ clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear; and
+ anoint thine eyes with eye salve, that thou mayest see.
+
+ 19. As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten: be zealous
+ therefore, and repent.
+
+ 20. Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my
+ voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup
+ with him, and he with me.
+
+ 21. To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my
+ throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down with my Father
+ in his throne.
+
+ 22. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+ the churches.
+
+Laodicea was one of the wealthiest cities of Asia Minor. It was built
+upon some low hills, and occupied an important situation in the center
+of a very fertile district. It was famous for its money transactions and
+for the beautiful soft wool grown by the sheep of the country, which
+facts are both alluded to in the message. Verses 17, 18. During the
+reign of Tiberius Cæsar it was entirely destroyed by an earthquake, but
+its wealthy inhabitants rebuilt it immediately. A Christian church was
+soon planted there; for Paul makes the request that his epistle to the
+Colossians be read in the church of Laodicea and that his epistle to the
+church of Laodicea (which was not included in the New Testament canon)
+be read unto them. Col. 4:16.
+
+The condition of this church, according to the burden of the message,
+was worse than that of any of the others; for there is not only no
+commendation of former faith and piety, but it is not even said of them,
+as of the church at Sardis, that a few names were left who had not
+defiled their garments. Christ, who here represents himself in the
+character of the "faithful and true Witness," testifies that they are
+"neither cold nor hot." They did not have enough piety nor zeal to cause
+them to do anything for the honor of Christ and his cause, neither were
+they open enemies. They were merely lukewarm, insincere friends, and, as
+such, were in a position to do the greatest harm. A certain writer has
+said, "We always dread a professed but insincere friend; he is the least
+desirable of all relations."
+
+They are further described as being satisfied to remain in their
+lukewarm condition, indulging themselves in the riches and the pleasures
+of this life. Theirs was a rich, prosperous, influential church in their
+estimation, and they were proud of it; but "the faithful and true
+Witness" declares that they were "wretched, and poor, and blind, and
+naked." What a contrast this congregation presents with the churches of
+Smyrna and Philadelphia, whose poverty and "little strength" are
+expressly mentioned, but who were rich in spirituality, and who received
+no reproof, but words of comfort! They of Laodicea possessed no true
+gold from the mine of gospel truth, no white raiment of righteousness to
+hide their spiritual nakedness, no clear vision to enable them to
+discern the things of the Spirit. In fact, they lacked everything
+necessary to constitute a church of which the Lord could approve and
+which would be an honor to his cause. But notwithstanding their sad
+condition, Christ still pleads with them to repent of their doings and
+to allow him to come in and sup with them, promising the overcomer the
+privilege of sharing the throne of his Redeemer.
+
+On account of their lukewarmness a severe threat was uttered--"I will
+spue thee out of my mouth." Allusion is doubtless made to the former
+catastrophe that overthrew the city under Tiberius, thus giving them
+warning of the destruction that might come upon them in the future. The
+result has been in accordance with the prediction. God spued that church
+out of his mouth centuries ago, and nothing remains of that proud,
+wealthy city. Not even a Turk has any fixed residence on the spot. Its
+ruins alone remain in their desolation, "rejected of God, deserted of
+man, its glory a ruin, its name a reproach." The Encyclopædia Britannica
+says, "Its ruins are of wide extent.... There is no doubt, however, that
+much has been buried beneath the surface by the _frequent earthquakes_
+to which the district is exposed."
+
+The prophecies concerning these individual churches have been fulfilled;
+so that even infidelity itself bears witness to the "strange
+verification of Apocalyptic promise and threatening." Two of the
+churches, Ephesus and Laodicea, where no spiritual souls remained, were
+threatened with utter extinction. They are now in utter ruins--forsaken,
+desolate. Sardis, too, where only a few names were left, is reduced to a
+small Turkish village, without a church or a Christian. Pergamus and
+Thyatira, where much spirituality remained, but where wickedness also
+was tolerated, still survive, though but mere remnants of their former
+greatness. While Smyrna and Philadelphia, where Christ found nothing to
+condemn and to whose churches he uttered only words of comfort and
+promise, remain until the present day and are the brightest spots on the
+whole scene, standing like erect columns in the midst of the surrounding
+ruins.
+
+I do not wish, however, to give too much prominence to the cities
+themselves in the fulfilment of these prophecies. The churches located
+in these seven cities of Asia were doubtless the main thing under
+consideration in the utterance of these promises and threatenings. Yet
+it is a singular fact that the subsequent history of the cities
+themselves has accorded in a remarkable degree with the nature of the
+prophecies uttered. It may be that God has preserved Smyrna and
+Philadelphia because of the piety of their ancient inhabitants.
+
+He who held the seven stars in his right hand and walked in the midst of
+the seven golden candle-sticks, still possesses the control of his
+ministers and is present in the congregations of the righteous; but let
+us all take warning from the example of the churches of Asia, and live
+such a life of devotion, charity, faith, and patience as Christ, the
+"faithful and true Witness," will approve of, that we may "walk with him
+in white" and have right to the "tree of life which is in the midst of
+the paradise of God."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+ After this I looked, and, behold, a door was opened in heaven:
+ and the first voice which I heard was as it were of a trumpet
+ talking with me; which said, Come up hither, and I will show
+ thee things which must be hereafter.
+
+ 2. And immediately I was in the spirit: and, behold, a throne
+ was set in heaven, and one sat on the throne.
+
+ 3. And he that sat was to look upon like a jasper and a sardine
+ stone: and there was a rainbow round about the throne, in sight
+ like unto an emerald.
+
+ 4. And round about the throne were four and twenty seats: and
+ upon the seats I saw four and twenty elders sitting, clothed in
+ white raiment; and they had on their heads crowns of gold.
+
+ 5. And out of the throne proceeded lightnings and thunderings
+ and voices: and there were seven lamps of fire burning before
+ the throne, which are the seven spirits of God.
+
+ 6. And before the throne there was a sea of glass like unto
+ crystal: and in the midst of the throne, and round about the
+ throne, were four beasts full of eyes before and behind.
+
+ 7. And the first beast was like a lion, and the second beast
+ like a calf, and the third beast had a face as a man, and the
+ fourth beast was like a flying eagle.
+
+ 8. And the four beasts had each of them six wings about him; and
+ they were full of eyes within: and they rest not day and night,
+ saying, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is,
+ and is to come.
+
+ 9. And when those beasts give glory and honor and thanks to him
+ that sat on the throne, who liveth for ever and ever,
+
+ 10. The four and twenty elders fall down before him that sat on
+ the throne, and worship him that liveth for ever and ever, and
+ cast their crowns before the throne, saying,
+
+ 11. Thou art worthy, O Lord, to receive glory and honor and
+ power: for thou hast created all things, and for thy pleasure
+ they are and were created.
+
+It is probable that the Apocalypse was communicated to John in parts, or
+consisted of a series of symbolic visions. This is indicated by the
+expression "after this I looked," and is also confirmed by the words
+following, "And immediately I was in the spirit," implying that the
+vision recorded in chapter 1, which was given on the Lord's day, had
+been interrupted and that a new one now began when the angel with
+trumpet voice gave summons for him to ascend to heaven "in the spirit"
+(or under the influence of the spirit of prophecy) to behold the events
+of the future, passing before him as a vast moving picture.
+
+This fact of John's ascension to heaven to behold certain visions of the
+future (which begin properly with chapter 6) will serve to explain many
+allusions to things said to occur in heaven, merely signifying that John
+was in heaven when these things were revealed to him, although their
+fulfilment was intimately connected with the affairs of the church on
+earth, for whose benefit the Revelation was given and unto whom it was
+sent.
+
+When the apostle ascended through the door that had been opened unto
+him, the first object that met his vision and absorbed his soul was a
+throne with the Almighty seated upon it, around whom all the inhabitants
+of heaven were assembled. No symbol of God is given, for the reason that
+there is no analagous object that can be chosen as his representative.
+True, John saw a throne, but that is a symbol, not of God himself, but
+of his supreme power and authority. One was seated upon the throne
+separate from the throne itself. It is not said that a jasper or a
+sardine stone was seated thereon, for that would be to make such an
+object the representative of God; but he that sat on the throne "was to
+look upon" like a jasper or sardine stone. The jasper mentioned was in
+all probability the diamond, and is described in chapter 21:11 as a
+stone most precious, clear as crystal; while the sardine stone was a
+brilliant gem of a red hue. This description naturally suggests the
+vestments of a great monarch in a position of authority upon his throne.
+The main idea, then, as here expressed, is that the appearance of the
+Almighty was so inexpressibly glorious that it could be likened to
+nothing except the beauty of the most resplendent gems. But God himself
+appears in his own person, unrepresented by another, for the reason, as
+above stated, that no inferior intelligence of earth or heaven can
+analagously represent the uncreated Deity.
+
+The throne of the omnipotent One was surrounded by a beautiful rainbow
+of emerald clearness, and was probably a perfect one, or a complete
+circle, such as ours would be could it come wholly into our sight. The
+rainbow on the cloud, to Noah and his descendants, constitutes the sure
+pledge of God's covenant promise not to destroy the earth with another
+deluge; so, also, the bow surrounding the throne is a symbol of God's
+covenant favor with his people eternally.
+
+There were "lightnings and thunderings and voices" proceeding from the
+throne--the same outward manifestations as heralded the Godhead when he
+came down on Sinai to declare his holy law. The "seven lamps of fire
+burning before the throne" are said to signify the seven spirits of God.
+These are not lamp-stands or candle-sticks, such as the ones in the
+midst of which the Son of God walked on earth, but seven lights or
+flames of fire, representing the operation of the Holy Spirit upon the
+hearts of men and women. Surrounding the throne also was "a sea of glass
+like unto crystal." In the Greek it stands in a little different
+form--"And before the throne _as it were_ a sea of glass." Describing
+the same object in chapter 15:2, the Revelator says, "I saw _as it were_
+a sea of glass." It was a broad expanse spread out before the throne
+with a glassy or transparent appearance like crystal. Its signification
+will be made clear hereafter.
+
+In addition to this description of the throne and Deity, our attention
+is directed to certain objects before and surrounding the throne. Four
+beasts and four and twenty elders are brought to view. The word _beasts_
+is a very unfortunate translation, being necessarily associated in our
+minds with the brute creation. It is not the word _therion_, which in
+thirty-five instances in the Apocalypse is translated beast, denoting an
+animal of wild disposition, but the word _zoon_, which signifies "a
+living creature," and is thus rendered by many of the translators of the
+New Testament. Their being full of eyes signifies sleepless vigilance
+and superior intelligence and discernment. The chief description given
+of the first living creature is that it was "like a lion." It is stated,
+not that the creature was a lion, but that it was "like a lion." It
+possessed some peculiar quality characteristic of the lion; namely,
+strength and courage. The second living creature, "like a calf," or,
+more properly, the ox, is symbolic of sacrifice or of patient labor. The
+third, with "a face as a man," denotes reason and intelligence. While
+the fourth, "like a flying eagle," is an emblem of swiftness and
+far-sighted vision.
+
+But the peculiar qualities thus symbolized are possessed by the four
+living creatures themselves, and what do _they_ represent? To whom are
+the four and twenty elders referred? They are particularly distinguished
+from the angelic throng. In the ninth verse of the following chapter the
+elders and the living creatures represent themselves as the host of
+people redeemed by the blood of Christ "out of every kindred, and
+tongue, and people, and nation." The above-mentioned characteristics,
+then, are the peculiar possession of God's people--power and courage to
+attack all enemies and to gain the victory; a spirit of perseverance in
+patiently laboring for Christ, with a willingness to sacrifice their
+lives, if necessary, for the glory of God; ability to receive a
+"knowledge of the truth," that they may understand the will of God in
+Christ Jesus concerning them; and power and willingness to obey
+instantly when able to discern spiritual things, rising above the things
+of earth and the trials and persecutions of life--soaring away to
+loftier heights, there to bask continually in the blessed sunlight of
+God's eternal presence.
+
+Why was it necessary that the redeemed company of God's people should be
+represented by _four_ living creatures? Doubtless because it would
+probably have been very difficult to select any _one_ creature combining
+all the characteristics desired to represent all God's people of all
+ages. It is also a significant fact that all the people of God on earth
+were included in four great dispensations--ante-deluvian, post-deluvian,
+Mosaic, and Christian; although it is not certain that _four_ living
+creatures were selected for the special purpose of showing the number of
+dispensations. However, this division of time is well established in the
+Bible. Peter reckons a new world beginning with Noah (2 Pet. 3:6, 7),
+stating that the old world had been destroyed. 2 Pet. 2:5. God came down
+upon Mount Sinai and delivered the old covenant, thus marking a distinct
+dispensation; while Jesus Christ established the new covenant and
+ushered in the fourth and last dispensation. See Heb. 12:18-24. Under
+the first dispensation, Abel by faith offered unto God an "excellent
+sacrifice"; men "began to call upon the name of the Lord" (Gen. 4:26);
+Enoch "walked with God" and "was translated that he should not see
+death"; while Noah, "a preacher of righteousness," was "perfect in his
+generation" and "condemned the world" by his preaching and obedience.
+The second dispensation was graced with a faithful Abraham, who
+"staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief, but was strong in
+faith," from which circumstance he was called "the friend of God" and
+has justly received the title "father of the faithful." In his footsteps
+followed Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, and Moses. The law age contains the names
+of many illustrious prophets of God, and the New Testament era abounds
+with brilliant examples of faith and devotion.
+
+The ministry of John the Baptist can not be said to form another
+dispensation, because of its short duration (he preceding Christ but six
+months), and being at the time unknown outside of a very limited
+territory. Another dispensation could not be begun and _completed_ while
+the old covenant dispensation was yet in force; for that would make two
+dispensations in full force at the same time--a thing impossible. Also,
+John's work, according to the evangelist, marks the beginning of the
+gospel dispensation (Mark 1:1-4), from which time the kingdom of God was
+preached and men pressed into it. Luke 16:16.
+
+It was by virtue of the future atonement-work of Christ that any were
+enabled to enjoy God's favor in Old Testament times. Even their
+sacrifices, which originated in the family of Adam and which were
+continued from generation to generation, pointed forward to the
+sacrificial offering of the Savior and by this means purchased covenant
+favors with Heaven. So, after all, the atonement was for their benefit
+as well as for ours. Paul expressly informs us that Christ died for the
+"redemption of the transgressions that were _under the first
+testament_." Heb. 9:15. "Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and _all the
+prophets_" are "in the kingdom of God" (Luke 13:28), and constitute a
+part of this great redeemed host set forth under the symbol of the four
+living creatures.
+
+The four and twenty elders, although representing themselves as a part
+of this redeemed company, evidently have some special signification; for
+they are presented to us as separate characters from the four living
+creatures. Who are they? Undoubtedly they represent the ministers of
+God, the number twenty-four also signifying perfection or completeness,
+being drawn from certain facts connected with the two dispensations in
+which God has had a clerical ministry. The natural heads of the tribes
+of Israel were the twelve patriarchs; while the spiritual heads of the
+Christian church are the twelve apostles of the Lamb, they constituting
+a part of the foundation upon which it is built. Eph. 2:20. In a
+subsequent chapter we have an account of the sealing of the twelve
+tribes, by which is meant the sealing, not of the literal Israel, but of
+the spiritual, the twelve tribes being selected from the proper
+department to stand as a symbol of the true Israel in this dispensation,
+which is expressly said to consist of people of all nations. Natural
+Israel and spiritual Israel are frequently used to designate God's
+people; so, also, in the case before us the twelve patriarchs as heads
+of the natural Israel and the twelve disciples as heads (in one
+important sense) of the spiritual Israel are taken to represent the
+entire ministry. In the description of the New Jerusalem we find
+conspicuously inscribed the names of the twelve tribes of the children
+of Israel and of the twelve apostles of the Lamb, thus making the number
+twenty-four. Chap. 21:12, 14.
+
+Although the ministers seem to be a special class among those
+constituting the redeemed multitude, yet their intimate connection with
+the remainder is set forth under another symbol--that of wings _attached
+to_ the four living creatures. Each of the four living ones possessed
+six wings, which, taken numerically, make up twenty-four again. The
+wings of a living creature would signify its means of flight; and it is
+by the action of the ministry, who "go into all the world" as flying
+messengers to preach the everlasting gospel, that the church of God is
+established among all nations. Thus, under the symbol of living
+creatures with wings is set forth the glorious harmony and unity that
+exists in the body of Christ between ministry and laity.
+
+The elders are represented as being clothed in white raiment and as
+possessing golden crowns. "White raiment" is a symbol of righteousness
+(chap. 19:8), while crowns represent special power and authority. God's
+ministers possess both. They are made righteous through the blood of the
+everlasting covenant and are given power over all the power of the enemy
+and authority to heal the sick and to cast out devils.
+
+The entire company are engaged in worshiping God unceasingly, the elders
+casting their crowns before the throne, thus ascribing all praise,
+honor, and glory to Him who has delegated to them the authority they
+possess. And may we, my brethren, never grow weary in well-doing and
+conclude that the worship of God grows monotonous; but let us, with
+heart and soul, join the universal chorus, "Holy, holy, holy, Lord God
+Almighty."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+ And I saw in the right hand of him that sat on the throne a book
+ written within and on the backside, sealed with seven seals.
+
+ 2. And I saw a strong angel proclaiming with a loud voice, Who
+ is worthy to open the book, and to loose the seals thereof?
+
+ 3. And no man in heaven, nor in earth, neither under the earth,
+ was able to open the book, neither to look thereon.
+
+ 4. And I wept much, because no man was found worthy to open and
+ to read the book, neither to look thereon.
+
+ 5. And one of the elders saith unto me, Weep not: behold, the
+ Lion of the tribe of Juda, the Root of David, hath prevailed to
+ open the book, and to loose the seven seals thereof.
+
+ 6. And I beheld, and, lo, in the midst of the throne and of the
+ four beasts, and in the midst of the elders, stood a Lamb as it
+ had been slain, having seven horns and seven eyes, which are the
+ seven spirits of God sent forth into all the earth.
+
+ 7. And he came and took the book out of the right hand of him
+ that sat upon the throne.
+
+ 8. And when he had taken the book, the four beasts and four and
+ twenty elders fell down before the Lamb, having every one of
+ them harps, and golden vials full of odors, which are the
+ prayers of saints.
+
+ 9. And they sung a new song, saying, Thou art worthy to take the
+ book, and to open the seals thereof: for thou wast slain, and
+ hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every kindred, and
+ tongue, and people, and nation;
+
+ 10. And hast made us unto our God kings and priests: and we
+ shall reign on the earth.
+
+ 11. And I beheld, and I heard the voice of many angels round
+ about the throne and the beasts and the elders: and the number
+ of them was ten thousand times ten thousand, and thousands of
+ thousands;
+
+ 12. Saying with a loud voice, Worthy is the Lamb that was slain
+ to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and
+ honor, and glory, and blessing.
+
+ 13. And every creature which is in heaven, and on the earth, and
+ under the earth, and such as are in the sea, and all that are in
+ them, heard it saying, Blessing, and honor, and glory, and
+ power, be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the
+ Lamb for ever and ever.
+
+ 14. And the four beasts said, Amen. And the four and twenty
+ elders fell down and worshipped him that liveth for ever and
+ ever.
+
+The vision of this chapter is but a continuation of the preceding one,
+being a sublime description of the exaltation and office-work of Christ
+in his two-fold character as the Lion of the tribe of Juda and as a
+sacrificial offering for the sins of the world. The Apocalypse opens
+with the words, "The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave unto
+him," and it is fitting that his special prerogatives and
+characteristics, together with the true position he occupies, should
+first be revealed. This was especially necessary in view of the fact to
+be revealed, that another would soon arise usurping the rights and
+prerogatives belonging to Christ alone, claiming to be supreme head of
+the church, sitting as God in the temple of God, and "showing himself
+that _he_ is God." 2 Thes. 2:4.
+
+The attention of John was directed to an object "in the right hand of
+Him that sat on the throne"--a book sealed with seven seals--and to a
+mighty angel calling with a loud voice for some one to come forward and
+loose the seals and open the book. No created intelligence of earth or
+heaven dared to step forward and declare himself able to accomplish the
+result required, and because of this John wept much.
+
+The form of books in use when the Revelation was given was unlike those
+used now. They consisted of strips of parchment or other material,
+longer or shorter, rolled up. The book in the symbolic vision before us
+consisted of a roll containing seven pieces each one rolled and sealed
+separately, so that the outer seal could be broken and the contents of
+its strip read without disturbing the remaining ones. Had the seals all
+been on the outside, nothing could have been read until they were all
+broken; whereas the loosing of each seal was followed by some discovery
+of the contents of the roll.
+
+This book in the hand of God is symbolical of something. Most of the
+commentators think it represents the book of Revelation, in which case,
+of course, it would not include the present description of the book
+itself, but only of its contents as applied to subsequent chapters. But
+this view, of itself, is unsatisfactory for many reasons. The rules
+governing the use and the interpretation of symbolic language would
+forbid the thought of one book's symbolizing another book; for the main
+idea conveyed by the term _symbol_ is, that the symbolic object stands
+as the representative, not of itself, but of something analagous.
+Reasoning by analogy, what would the contents of a sealed book in the
+hand of God symbolize? Evidently, the infinite counsels and purposes
+known only to Jehovah. Its being written within and on the backside
+would indicate that those purposes were full and complete, being all
+written out and understood by him who "knoweth the end from the
+beginning" and "worketh all things after the counsel of his own will."
+Its being sealed denotes that the contents were unrevealed, while its
+being in the right hand of God--the hand of his power--shows that he is
+able to carry into execution his divine purposes and that none shall be
+able to alter them or to wrest them from him.
+
+While the events future of John's time form a part of the great plan and
+counsels of Jehovah, yet it is taking a very limited view of the subject
+to suppose that they alone constitute the sealed book of this vision;
+for then would that greatest of all events, the atonement of Christ and
+the earliest triumphs of the gospel, have no special part in the sealed,
+mysterious counsels of the infinite One. It is much more consistent with
+the characteristics and attributes of God to make this book a symbol,
+not merely of a part, but of all his divine plans and purposes in the
+entire gospel dispensation. This position gains credence from the fact
+that the visions of the Revelation cover many times the whole period
+from the incarnation to the end. When the very first seal is broken, the
+early success and triumphs of the gospel, as experienced in John's
+lifetime, are portrayed. According to the vision before us, it was by
+virtue of Christ's death that he was able to open the book at all; and
+the plan of redemption itself, which is based upon his atonement, is
+declared by the Scriptures to be a "mystery which from the beginning of
+the world hath been _hid in God_." Eph. 3:9. This redemption scheme was
+the great center of attraction to the prophets of the old dispensation,
+who "inquired and searched diligently" that they might comprehend its
+deep mysteries, "which things the _angels desired to look into_." 1 Pet.
+1:10-12.
+
+Now, if the contents of the sealed book were (at the time of this
+vision) only the history of events to be, why was it that no man on
+earth or in heaven, nor even an angel before the throne, was found
+worthy to "look into" it or to communicate its secrets to the children
+of men. Gabriel was sent as a worthy messenger to communicate to Daniel
+a long series of future events reaching even until the end of time. But
+the contents of this roll were such that no created intelligence of
+earth or heaven was able to unfold them. All remained unfathomable
+mystery--until Christ stepped forward in his character as a sacrificial
+Lamb and declared himself able to undertake the task of loosing the
+seals and of opening the book. "Unto you it is given to _know the
+mystery_ of the kingdom of God" (Mark 4:11), he said to his disciples,
+"even the mystery which hath been hid from ages and from generations,
+but now is _made manifest_ to his saints." Col. 1:26. "Verily I say unto
+you, That many prophets and righteous men have desired to see those
+things which ye see, and have not seen them; and to hear those things
+which ye hear, and have not heard them. Blessed are your eyes, for they
+see; and your ears, for they hear." Mat. 13:17, 16.
+
+The fact that the suffering and death of Christ was a past event at the
+time when the Revelation was given does not constitute a valid objection
+to the position taken, that the contents of the sealed book embrace the
+plan of redemption during the entire period of its operation; for the
+reason that, in order to form a complete and continuous narrative, past
+events are frequently referred to in the Apocalypse. Thus, John saw a
+beast with seven heads signifying seven kings; but he was expressly
+informed that "_five are fallen_, one is [exists at present], and the
+other is not yet come." Chap. 17:10.
+
+When Christ appears on the symbolic stage, he is introduced by the elder
+as "the Lion of the tribe of Juda," and "the Root of David." The lion,
+being the king of beasts and the monarch of the forest, is indicative of
+power, such as Christ possesses. Christ is elsewhere denominated "King
+of kings and Lord of lords," and he himself laid claim to "all power in
+heaven and on earth," it having "pleased the Father that in him should
+all fulness dwell." Why he is termed "the Lion of the tribe of Juda," I
+am unable to say, unless the expression is borrowed from the prophecy
+recorded of him in Gen. 49:10--"The sceptre shall not depart from Judah,
+nor a lawgiver from between his feet, until Shiloh come; and unto him
+shall the gathering of the people be." His being the "Root of David"
+shows that he is the source and sustainer of David as to his position
+and power. David was specially ordained of the Lord and sustained by
+him. Of this there can be no doubt. David was a type; Christ is the
+antitype. David's position as ruler over natural Israel constitutes a
+type of Christ's position as ruler over the spiritual Israel; and it is
+in this sense that Christ reigns upon the throne of his father David.
+Luke 1:32, 33. And since Christ came in the line of David's descendants,
+he is called the offspring of David and a rod out of the stem of Jesse.
+Isa. 11:1, 10. His connection with the throne of David being evident, he
+is entitled to the right to reign over his people. The appellation
+_Lamb_ is one of the peculiar titles by which the Son of God is
+designated, having reference to that part of his mission in which he
+constituted a sacrificial offering for sin. His forerunner John was able
+to prophetically discern him in this character, and pointed to him as
+"the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world." John 1:29.
+The Lamb was said to have seven horns and seven eyes. A horn is a symbol
+of power, and seven, being a sacred or perfect number, denotes the
+fulness of power possessed by Christ; while the seven eyes signify the
+seven spirits of God, or the Holy Spirit, which, being under the direct
+control of Christ, is sent forth into the world to effect the
+regeneration of men.
+
+When the Lion of the tribe of Juda stepped forward and undertook the
+task of revealing the secret counsels and purposes of Jehovah to the
+world, immediately a song of praise ascended from the lips of the
+redeemed sons of earth. The song was new, adapted to a new theme, and
+sung on a new occasion. "The four beasts and four and twenty elders fell
+down before the Lamb, having every one of them harps, and golden vials
+[censers] full of odors, which are the prayers of saints. And they sung
+a new song, saying, Thou art worthy to take the book, and to open the
+seals thereof: for thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy
+blood out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation; and hast
+made us unto our God kings and priests, and we shall reign on the
+earth." This song beautifully expresses the honor due to Jesus Christ in
+his office-work as Redeemer of the world, by virtue of which people out
+of every nation, kindred, tongue, and people, are saved unto God and
+made kings and priests on the earth. The angel who appeared to the
+Judean shepherds while they were watching their flocks by night,
+comforted them with the welcome announcement: "Fear not: for, behold, I
+bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to _all people_. For
+unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, which is Christ
+the Lord." Luke 2:10, 11.
+
+Since the preaching of the gospel began, men are instructed to "seek
+first the kingdom of God" (Mat. 6:33), and they "press into it" (Luke
+16:16) by the saving virtue of Him "who hath delivered us from the power
+of darkness, and hath translated us _into the kingdom_ of his dear Son."
+Col. 1:13. Taking our place by the side of the writer of the Revelation,
+we testify with him that we are already "in the kingdom and patience of
+Jesus Christ" (Rev. 1:9), and that we "receive abundance of grace and of
+the gift of righteousness," whereby "we _reign in life_ by one Jesus
+Christ." Rom. 5:17. In this happy condition, redeemed by the blood of
+Jesus, our Savior, made "a royal [kingly] priesthood" in the "holy
+nation" of "peculiar people" that have been gathered out of all nations
+of earth (1 Pet. 2:5, 9), we feel like singing anew this glad song of
+redemption in honor of Jesus, our only Lord and Savior, who is God over
+all, blessed forever! Amen.
+
+This new and rapturous song of the redeemed was immediately caught by a
+greater multitude of the angelic order, an innumerable company, even
+"ten thousand times ten thousand, and thousands of thousands," and
+together, with loud and united voices, did they swell the mighty anthem,
+"Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power, and riches, and
+wisdom, and strength, and honor, and glory, and blessing." And again the
+heavenly strain was raised to loftier heights, until the stupendous
+chorus rolled around the universe, by every creature in heaven and on
+earth, and under the earth, and such as are in the sea, saying,
+"Blessing and honor, and glory, and power, be unto him that sitteth upon
+the throne, and unto the Lamb forever and ever." A few gifted voices of
+earth may possess such power and sweetness as almost to entrance us with
+their melody of song; but what an oratorio will it be, my brethren,
+when, released from the narrow limits of mortality, that sublime strain
+sung by the redeemed of all ages and ten thousand times ten thousand and
+thousands of thousands of angels, bursts in upon our ransomed souls! Did
+human thought ever reach the conception of music like this? Did the eyes
+of a mortal ever behold such rapturous scenes? You may feast your eyes
+upon earth's greatest beauty--Yosemite Valley, Yellowstone Park, Niagara
+Falls, may pass before your vision; you may climb the lofty Alpine
+summit and behold the snow-streaked and snow-capped peaks towering to
+the heavens around you--or you may listen to the best music ever
+composed by a Mozart, a Handel, or a Beethoven, or the finest ever
+executed by a Liszt, a Rubenstein, or a Paderewski; yet I must tell you
+upon the authority of God's word that "eye hath not _seen_, nor ear
+_heard_, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which
+God hath prepared for them that love him." 1 Cor. 2:9.
+
+This vision shows very clearly the lofty position to which Christ has
+been exalted, possessing "a name which is above every name"; for the
+entire company of angels and redeemed saints unite in extolling him with
+songs of praise, and that, too, before the very throne of the Deity and
+in the presence of his infinite Majesty. Surely we can not doubt that
+ours is a divine Savior, and one worthy of all praise, honor, power and
+dominion both now and forever.
+
+Though John beheld this wonderful vision in heaven, yet we must remember
+that it was given and recorded for the benefit of God's people upon
+earth. The plan of redemption was not actually revealed in heaven, for
+"Jesus Christ came _into the world_ to save sinners" (1 Tim. 1:15), and
+it was here that he was ordained to "taste death for every man." Heb.
+2:9. The ransomed company thus brought to view is intended to point out
+the redeemed of earth; for there is no salvation to be obtained in
+heaven, in which place no blood was shed--the blood is one of the agents
+that bears witness in the earth. 1 John 5:7, 8. The central figures of
+this vision were God, the Holy Spirit, and Christ, around whom the
+living creatures and elders were gathered, and they, in turn, were
+surrounded by the angelic throng. This entire scene was doubtless
+intended to represent the exalted character of spiritual things on
+earth, where the plan of redemption was revealed and the redeemed host
+gathered out of all nations. In a very important sense the Father, the
+Son, and the Holy Ghost all dwell in the spiritual church, or new
+Jerusalem, and are thus "in the midst" of God's people, surrounded by
+the redeemed host who unceasingly worship them, and they, in turn, have
+the promise that "the angel of the Lord encampeth round about them"
+(Psa. 34:7); yea, "an innumerable company of angels" reside in this
+"heavenly Jerusalem," or "city of the living God," unto which we, as a
+part of the "general assembly and church of the first-born," "_are
+come_" in this dispensation. Heb. 12:22, 23.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+
+ And I saw when the Lamb opened one of the seals, and I heard, as
+ it were the noise of thunder, one of the four beasts saying,
+ Come and see.
+
+ 2. And I saw, and behold a white horse: and he that sat on him
+ had a bow; and a crown was given unto him: and he went forth
+ conquering, and to conquer.
+
+We have now reached the point where the thrilling interest of this book
+commences. With the opening of the seals of the book of God's purposes
+we have the prophecies of the future, the unfolding of the events to be,
+described under appropriate symbols. The contents of six seals are
+contained in this and the following chapter, while the seventh occupies
+the remainder of the volume.
+
+A word relative to the plan of the prophecies will be appropriate at
+this time. I will again state what will be made very clear
+hereafter--that the events are narrated by series, and not by centuries.
+A particular theme is taken up and carried through to its completion,
+then the narrative returns and another subject is traced to its end.
+Thus, the entire book consists of a number of distinct parallel series
+covering the same ground.
+
+Upon the opening of the first seal, John is summoned as with a voice of
+thunder by one of the living creatures to draw near; and the object that
+meets his vision is a white horse with its rider. The symbol is that of
+a victorious warrior, being drawn from the civil and military life of
+the Romans. The symbol is one of dignity. It does not consist of some
+inanimate object such as a mountain, a sea, or a river, neither is it a
+wild ferocious beast; but it is that of a living, active, intelligent
+being, and he, as denoted by various insignia, a conqueror. He rides a
+white horse, such as victors used in triumphal procession; his bow and
+crown are also symbols of victory. He goes forth conquering and to
+conquer, or to make conquests.
+
+This symbol is a faithful representation of the early triumphs of
+Christianity in its aggressive conflict with the huge systems of error
+with which it had to contend. Some have supposed that the rider
+represented Jesus Christ; but this can not be, for many reasons, two of
+which I will give. First. Christ always appears on the symbolic stage in
+his own character, unrepresented by another, for the reason, as before
+stated, that there is no creature that can analagously represent Him who
+claims equality with God. Not one name or attribute peculiar to him is
+mentioned in the description. Second. There are four horsemen brought to
+view in this chapter, and the symbols all being drawn from the same
+department, must have the same general application. If the first
+horseman symbolizes _a definite personage_, so do the remaining three;
+but we should have great difficulty in identifying the last three,
+giving them an individual application.
+
+Others make the first horseman a symbol of the gospel itself, but the
+gospel is not a living, active, intelligent agent, such as the symbol
+evidently is, but is only a system of the revealed truth. All congruity
+and appropriateness in the comparison is lacking.
+
+But let us give this symbol further consideration. It is not enough that
+its interpretation alone be given, but the reader is justly entitled to
+a knowledge of the process by which we arrive at the truth. In the first
+place, we have a symbol of great dignity and excellence, and we must
+look for an object of corresponding character. The symbol is that of a
+living agent, and consequently, we must look for its fulfillment in an
+active, intelligent agent. The purity, or whiteness, of the horse on
+which the rider was seated would indicate an agency of mild, beneficent
+character. Finally, the symbol is drawn, as before stated, from the
+civil and military life of the Romans. Now, according to the laws of
+symbolic language, a symbol never represents an object like itself, but
+an analagous one in another department. A wild beast does not represent
+a wild beast, but something of analagous character. Seven fat and seven
+lean kine do not represent kine like themselves, but something
+analagous--seven years of plenty and as many of famine. There are only
+two great series of events described in the Revelation--the history of
+ecclesiastical events and the political history of certain nations. The
+present symbol is drawn from one of these departments--the political or
+the civil life of the Romans; and leaving the latter department to find
+its signification in another department, we have no place to go except
+into the department of ecclesiastical affairs. Entering, therefore, the
+spiritual realm, and looking about us for an object that perfectly meets
+every requirement of the symbol, we find it in _the humble ministers of
+Christ_, who boldly went forth in obedience to the divine command to
+extend the peaceful triumphs of the cross and to carry the gospel of the
+kingdom of God "into all the world." Mark 16:15-18; Mat. 28:19, 20. This
+succession of faithful, holy, devoted men is worthy of a place in
+Apocalyptic vision. They went forth "conquering and to conquer"; and the
+victories they gained were such as the world never witnessed before.
+Worthy are they to wear a victor's crown, for they have "fought a good
+fight."
+
+Because of its connection with events following, it is necessary for us
+to consider the divine position of these first ministers of the church.
+Their _equality_ is clearly taught in the New Testament. Christ gave
+them the express command, "Be not ye called Rabbi: for one is your
+Master, even Christ; and all ye are _brethren_." Mat. 23:8. When two of
+the disciples manifested a desire to gain preeminence over their
+brethren and their aspirations displeased the ten, Christ said to them
+all, "Ye know that the princes of the Gentiles exercise dominion over
+them, and they that are great exercise authority upon them. But it
+_shall not be so among you_." Mat. 20:25, 26. Thus a perfect standard of
+equality in the ministry is lifted up. The beloved apostle, the writer
+of the Revelation, when addressing the elders of the seven churches of
+Asia in particular, humbly and affectionately represented himself as
+their "_brother_ and companion in tribulation." Rev. 1:9.
+
+I will now adduce the testimony of several creditable historians, who
+are compelled to admit the humble equality of the New Testament
+ministry, notwithstanding the fact that some of them belonged to
+churches containing a very _unequal_ ministry.
+
+Mosheim says: "The rulers of the church were called their presbyters or
+bishops, which two titles are, in the New Testament, undoubtedly applied
+to the same order of men.... Let no one confound the bishops of this
+primitive and golden period of the church, with those of whom we read in
+the following ages. For, though they were both distinguished by the same
+name, yet they differed extremely, and that in many respects." Vol. I,
+p. 99.
+
+This fact is now admitted by nearly all denominations, even
+Episcopalians. In the work entitled "Episcopacy Tested by Scripture,"
+published by the Protestant Episcopal Tract Society, New York, the
+author, one of their able advocates, makes the following admission
+concerning the title _bishop_ in the New Testament, "that the name is
+there given to the middle order or presbyters; and _all_ that we read in
+the New Testament concerning _bishops_, including of course the words
+_overseer_ and _oversight_, which have the same derivation, is to be
+regarded as pertaining to that middle grade"--the presbyters or elders.
+Page 12.
+
+The noted historian Waddington, also an Episcopalian, makes the same
+admission in the following words: "It is also true that in the earliest
+government of the first Christian society, that of Jerusalem, not the
+elders only, but the 'whole church' were associated with the apostles;
+and it is even _certain_ that the terms _bishop_ and _elder_ or
+_presbyter_ were, in the first instances, and for a short period,
+sometimes used synomously, and indiscriminately applied to the _same
+order_ in the ministry." Church History, Part I, p. 41. The italicizing
+is mine.
+
+The well-known historian Milman, also an Episcopalian, in his History of
+Christianity, says, "The earliest Christian communities appear to have
+been ruled and represented, in the absence of the apostle who was their
+first founder, by their elders, who are likewise called bishops, or
+overseers of the church." Page 194.
+
+Kurtz, in his Church History, says: "To aid them in their work, or to
+supply their places in their absence (Acts 14:23), the apostles ordained
+rulers in every church, who bore the common name of _elders_ from their
+dignity, and of _bishops_ from the nature of their office. That
+originally the elders were the same as the bishops, we gather with
+absolute certainty from the statements of the New Testament and of
+Clement of Rome, a disciple of the apostles. (See his first epistle to
+the Corinthians, Chaps. 42, 44:52.) 1. The presbyters are expressly
+called bishops--compare [the Greek especially] Acts 20:17 with verse 28,
+and Titus 1:5 with verse 7. 2. The office of presbyter is described as
+next to and highest after that of apostle (Acts 15:6, 22). Similarly,
+the elders are represented as those to whom alone the rule, the teaching
+and the care of the church is entrusted (1 Tim. 5:17; 1 Pet. 5:1,
+etc.).... In [several] passages of the New Testament and of Clement we
+read of many bishops in one and the same church. In the face of such
+indubitable evidence, it is difficult to account for the pertinacity
+with which Romish and Anglican theologians insist that these two offices
+had from the first been different in name and functions.... Even Jerome,
+Augustine, Urban II. (1091) and Petrus Lombardus admit that originally
+the two had been identical. It was reserved for the Council of Trent to
+convert this truth into a heresy." Pages 67, 68. Chrysostom, Theodoret,
+and others also admitted the same.
+
+Many similar historical testimonies now lying before me to the humble
+equality of the New Testament ministry could be added; but lest the
+reader become weary, I will conclude with the following beautiful
+description from D'Aubigne in his noted History of the Reformation: "The
+church was in the beginning a community of brethren, guided by a few of
+the _brethren_." Again, "All Christians were priests of the living God,
+with _humble pastors_ as their guides." Vol. I, pp. 35, 50.
+
+With this description of the early ministers of Christ, who went forth
+under the symbol of the first horseman to disciple all nations, we have
+the events pertaining to the early history of the church, laid before
+us; until the opening of the second seal brings us to another important
+phase of its history.
+
+ 3. And when he had opened the second seal, I heard the second
+ beast say, Come and see.
+
+ 4. And there went out another horse that was red: and power was
+ given to him that sat thereon to take peace from the earth, and
+ that they should kill one another: and there was given unto him
+ a great sword.
+
+The symbol of this seal is that of a rider going forth on a red horse
+armed with a great sword with which to take peace from the earth and to
+kill. It is drawn from the same source as that of the preceding one, but
+differing greatly in the character of the horseman and the object of his
+mission. The symbol is one of great dignity--a living, intelligent
+agent--drawn from civil and military life. For the same reason as given
+before, we must go out of the department of civil life into the history
+of religious affairs to find its fulfilment.
+
+Notice, also, the peculiar characteristics of this horseman and wherein
+he differs from that of the first seal. The color of the horse is red,
+denoting something very different from the peace, purity, and benignity
+of the white. Instead of gaining glorious spiritual conquests and
+triumphs, like him of the first seal, he was to take peace from the
+earth. In the place of a victor's crown, he possesses "a great sword"
+with which to kill, denoting an agent of great destruction.
+
+Where shall we look in the history of religious affairs to find the
+object that meets the requirements of this symbol? Who were the active,
+intelligent agents that appeared as the great opposers of the
+establishment of Christianity by the rider of the white horse? We find
+the answer undoubtedly in the propagators of the _Pagan religions_. As
+soon as Christianity began to gain a foothold in the Roman Empire, the
+priests and supporters of Paganism were exasperated to the last degree,
+and they determined to crush out the Christian religion. An example of
+Pagan opposition is found in the nineteenth chapter of Acts, where it is
+recorded that the preaching of the gospel so stirred the people of
+Ephesus that they were filled with wrath and for the space of about two
+hours cried out, saying, "Great is Diana of the Ephesians!" This great
+conflict between Christianity and Paganism will be more fully described
+under other symbols in a subsequent chapter, therefore I will make this
+description brief.
+
+The destruction of life brought about by this rider of the red horse
+doubtless signifies the great slaughter of the Christians at the hands
+of the Pagans. During ten seasons of severe persecution, which occurred
+under the reigns of the emperors Nero, Domitian, Trajan, Marcus
+Aurelius, Septimus Severus, Maximus, Decius, Gallus, Valerian, and
+Diocletian, the Christians suffered every indignity that their
+relentless persecutors could heap upon them. They had their eyes burned
+out with red-hot irons; they were dragged about with ropes until life
+was extinct; they were beheaded, stoned to death, crucified, thrown to
+wild beasts, burned at the stake; yet "they overcame by the blood of the
+Lamb, and by the word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives
+unto the death." Chap. 12:11.
+
+It may appear at first that taking the rider of the horse as a symbolic
+agent but the killing which he effected as literal, is an inconsistency
+and a variation from the laws of symbolic language; but such is not
+necessarily the case. One principle laid down in the beginning was, that
+the description of an object or event must necessarily be literal when
+no symbolic object could be found to analagously represent it. The
+destruction of human life could not well be represented symbolically,
+there being no destruction analagous to it whose meaning would be
+obvious; hence it must appear as a literal description. This is proved
+by many texts in the Revelation that will admit of no other application;
+such as verses 9-11 of this chapter; chapter 13:10; 17:6; etc.
+
+But the literal destruction of life may be chosen as a symbol to
+represent a destruction to which it is plainly analagous; such as the
+destruction of spiritual life, the overthrow of the civil or
+ecclesiastical institutions of society, etc. That it is sometimes
+employed thus as a symbol will be shown clearly in subsequent chapters.
+Hence, in every instance where killing men is the work of a symbolic
+agent, the context, or general series of events with which it is
+connected, must determine whether the literal or symbolical
+signification is intended. In the present prophecy under consideration
+it is much more consistent to give it the literal application; for the
+devotees of Paganism did not destroy the spiritual life of the church,
+which would be an analagous killing; neither did they succeed in
+overthrowing the structure of Christianity.
+
+ 5. And when he had opened the third seal, I heard the third
+ beast say, Come and see. And I beheld, and lo a black horse; and
+ he that sat on him had a pair of balances in his hand.
+
+ 6. And I heard a voice in the midst of the four beasts say, A
+ measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley for a
+ penny; and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine.
+
+This symbol is also that of a horseman, differing from the preceding
+ones only in his characteristics. He is seated upon a black horse,
+denoting something dark or appalling in its nature, the very opposite of
+that of the first seal. He possesses no bow nor crown, but instead he
+has a pair of balances in his hand for weighing food. This he deals out
+only at exorbitant prices--"a measure of wheat for a penny, and three
+measures of barley for a penny." The penny, or denarius, is equal to
+about fifteen cents of our money, and was the ordinary wages of a day
+laborer. In the parable of our Lord recorded in Mat. 20, the householder
+is represented as hiring laborers for a penny a day to labor in his
+vineyard. The measure, or _choenix_, of wheat was the usual daily
+allowance of food for a man. So according to the rate given, it would
+require a day's labor to supply food sufficient for one man, which shows
+an enormous price placed upon these necessaries of life. In ordinary
+times the penny would procure about twenty measures of wheat instead of
+one, and fifty or sixty measures of barley instead of three. Surely this
+represents famine prices.
+
+The expression "see thou hurt not the oil and the wine" seems to have
+some direct connection with the exorbitant schedule of food rates. The
+following facts of history, as recorded by Lord, will serve to make the
+matter clear: "The taxes required in the Roman empire, to sustain the
+court and civil service, the army and desolating wars, and the hungry
+brood of office-holders, as well as to provide largesses to the
+soldiers, were excessive in the extreme, so as to prove an almost
+insupportable burden to the people. The ordinary and economical expenses
+of the government were great; but when we take into view that during a
+period of seventy-two years previous to Diocletian, there were
+twenty-six individuals who held the imperial crown, besides a great
+number of unsuccessful aspirants, and that each of these must secure the
+favor of the army and the people by large donations of money, we may
+well conceive that the taxes and exactions laid to raise the needed
+amount must have proved a crushing burden. They were so great as
+sometimes to strip men of their wealth and reduce them to poverty. These
+were laid upon everything that could be brought into service. Nothing
+was too insignificant to escape.... The taxes might be paid in money, or
+in produce, grain, fruit, oil, or whatever else it might be;... The
+exactions were so excessive that the people were led to avoid them in
+every possible mode, as men always will under such circumstances." Once
+in fifteen years, a Roman indiction, an assessor would go round to levy
+upon the products of the soil, and the assessment was made according to
+the amount of the yield. One method adopted to secure a lower assessment
+at this time was that of mutilating their fruit trees and vines. We find
+among the Roman laws severe enactments against such as "feign poverty,
+or cut a vine, or stint the fruit of a tree" in order to avoid a fair
+valuation, and the penalty attached was the death of the offender and
+the confiscation of all his property. The fact that this law existed
+shows that the offense was committed and also that the exactions of the
+government must have been of the most oppressive kind.
+
+With these facts before us it is easy to discern the nature of the
+symbol, being that of a Roman magistrate prepared to enforce his severe
+exactions upon the people at the exorbitant rate of three measures of
+wheat for a penny and three measures of barley for a penny, accompanied
+by the solemn injunction, "See thou hurt not the oil and the wine," that
+is, the olive-trees and the vines.
+
+It is evident that we must, as before, go out of the department of civil
+and military life into the realm of ecclesiastical history to find the
+true fulfilment of this symbol. The black color of the horse would
+denote something directly opposite to that of the first seal; and since
+the symbol of the first seal represented the establishment of the pure
+gospel of Jesus Christ, this symbol must represent the great apostasy
+and spiritual darkness that covered the world at a later period. And if
+the horseman of the first seal represented the chosen ministry who went
+forth in a glorious mission to win trophies of grace, the horseman of
+this seal must represent _an apostate ministry_, possessing power and
+authority to enforce the severest exactions upon the bread of life, thus
+producing a desolating spiritual famine.
+
+This marvelous change from the humble apostolic ministry to an apostate
+one did not occur suddenly, but by degrees; and as it has a great
+bearing upon other lines of truth to be brought out in subsequent
+chapters, it will be profitable to consider the most important steps by
+which this transformation was effected.
+
+When the desire for precedence or superiority first manifested itself
+among the disciples, Christ repressed it (Mat. 20:25, 26), and it
+appeared no more in their midst; but before the close of the first
+century it is evident that a thirst for preeminence existed in the
+hearts of some who had been the servants of the church. An example of
+this is to be found in Diotrephes, who exalted himself above his
+ministerial associates. The Apostle John says concerning him: "I wrote
+unto the church: but Diotrephes, who loveth to have the preeminence
+among them, receiveth us not. Wherefore if I come, I will remember his
+deeds which he doeth, prating against us with malicious words: and not
+content therewith, neither doth he himself receive the brethren, and
+forbiddeth them that would, and casteth them out of the church." 3 John
+9, 10.
+
+In the historical extracts given in the explanation of the first
+horseman, it is clear that the first ministers were all equal; but a
+time came about the close of the first century when the most influential
+among the clergy grasped the power and exalted themselves to a position
+of authority over the rest. The manner in which this transformation was
+effected is explained by the learned Gieseler as follows: "After the
+death of the apostles, and the pupils of the apostles, to whom the
+general direction of the churches had always been conceded, some one
+amongst the presbyters of each church was suffered gradually to take the
+lead in its affairs. In the same irregular way the title of _bishop_ was
+appropriated to the first presbyter." Eccl. Hist., Vol. I, p. 65. In the
+days when the apostles were active in the affairs of the church there
+were but two classes in the ministry--elders, or bishops, and deacons;
+but when one of the presbyters was exalted to a higher position than the
+rest and assumed to himself the exclusive use of the word bishop, there
+were three classes. To quote the words of Geo. P. Fisher: "After we
+cross the limit of the first century we find that with each board of
+elders there is a person to whom the name of bishop is specially
+applied, although, for a long time, he is likewise often called a
+presbyter. In other words, in the room of a two-fold, we have a
+three-fold ministry." Hist. of the Christian Church, p. 51.
+
+The height to which the single bishop of authority in a church had been
+exalted is well illustrated in the Ignatian Epistles. Ignatius was
+bishop of Antioch and was condemned by the emperor Trajan to suffer
+death by being thrown to the wild beasts in the amphitheatre in Rome.
+His execution in this manner took place Dec. 20, A.D. 107. He wrote a
+number of epistles, a few extracts from which I will give. "Wherefore it
+is fitting that ye should run together in accordance with the will of
+your bishop, which thing also ye do. For your justly renowned
+presbytery, worthy of God, is fitted as exactly to the bishop as the
+strings are to the harp." To the Ephesians, Chap. 4. "See that ye all
+follow the bishop, even as Jesus Christ does the Father.... Let no man
+do anything connected with the church without the bishop." To the
+Smyrnaean's, Chap. 8. "It is not lawful without the bishop either to
+baptize or to celebrate a love-feast; but whatsoever he shall approve
+of, that is also pleasing to God." Smyrnaean's, Chap. 8. "It is well to
+reverence both God and the bishop. He who honors the bishop has been
+honored of God; but he who does anything without the knowledge of the
+bishop, does [in reality] serve the devil." Smyrnaean's, Chap. 9.
+
+The power of these bishops advanced steadily during the second century.
+The churches of the cities where they were located extended themselves
+into the surrounding country and smaller towns, and the presbyters or
+elders of these inferior churches were presided over by the bishop of
+their mother church, and in this manner the great system of diocesan
+episcopacy was developed.[3]
+
+[Footnote 3: The ancient signification of the term _diocese_ must not be
+confounded with the modern usage of the term. It then designated a
+territory or district, usually containing a number of minor churches,
+presided over by one bishop.]
+
+In the latter part of the second century when the disputes concerning
+Easter and Montanism arose, the custom of diocesan bishops consulting
+with each other on important doctrines began, and this developed in the
+third century into regular provincial synods, or councils. On account of
+the ecclesiastical or political importance of the cities in which they
+were located, certain bishops had a special deference given them, and
+they were not slow to take advantage of the opportunity to exalt
+themselves to the presidency of these councils; and in a very short time
+they possessed immense power and constituted entirely a separate order,
+designated by the term metropolitan.
+
+The manner in which this important step in the great apostasy was taken
+and the effects produced thereby is well described in the words of the
+historian Mosheim (referring to events of the third century), from whom
+I quote: "In process of time, all the Christian churches of a province
+were formed into one large ecclesiastical body, which, like confederate
+states, assembled at certain times, in order to deliberate about the
+common interests of the whole.... These councils ... _changed the whole
+face of the church_, and gave it a new form; for by them the ancient
+privileges of the people were considerably diminished, and the power and
+authority of the bishops greatly augmented.... At their first appearance
+in these general councils, they acknowledged that they were no more than
+the delegates of their respective churches, and that they acted in the
+name, and by the appointment of their people. But they soon changed this
+humble tone, imperceptibly extended the limits of their authority,
+turned their influence into dominion, and their councils into laws; and
+openly asserted, at length, that Christ had empowered them to prescribe
+to his people, _authoritative rules of faith and manners_.... The order
+and decency of these assemblies required that some one of the provincial
+bishops met in council, should be invested with a _superior_ degree of
+power and authority; and hence the rights of _metropolitans_ derive
+their origin."--Church History, Cent. II, Part 2.
+
+When a usurping clergy grasps the power to prescribe "authoritative
+rules of faith and manners," to employ the words of Mosheim, we may well
+conceive that the true amount of pure spiritual food was exceedingly
+small and could be procured only at starvation rates. He who reads the
+ecclesiastical events of the third century will find it only too true
+that many of the cardinal virtues of apostolic Christianity were almost
+lost sight of and that a great spiritual famine existed in the earth
+over which this dark horseman of the third seal careered. Instead of
+salvation through the Spirit of God being carefully taught, baptismal
+regeneration was exalted, and the people were instructed in the saving
+virtues of the eucharist. The Platonic idea concerning sin having its
+seat in the flesh was adopted, and therefore perfect victory or
+sanctification was made to consist in the mortification of the natural
+appetites and desires of the body, with the result that a life of
+fasting, celibacy, or self-inflicted torture was looked upon as the
+surest means of obtaining the favor of Heaven. The writings of such
+eminent church Fathers as Tertullian, Origen, Cyprian and others now
+lying before me, contain the surest evidences of the woeful extent to
+which this dark cloud of superstition and error had settled down over
+the world during the period of which I write.
+
+ 7. And when he had opened the fourth seal, I heard the voice of
+ the fourth beast say, Come and see.
+
+ 8. And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that sat
+ on him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was
+ given unto them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with
+ sword, and with hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of
+ the earth.
+
+The usual interpretation given this horse and its rider is to apply it
+to the desolating wars and famines that occurred in the Roman Empire.
+This view is embodied in the celebrated painting "Death on the Pale
+Horse," in which death is represented as going forth with war,
+pestilence, famine, and wild beasts, to ravage the Roman empire. We are
+informed by historians that dreadful pestilences and famines did prevail
+and in some places nearly depopulated the country, and that the
+remaining inhabitants could not make head against the beasts that
+multiplied in the land. But the fact that such events occurred is not
+sufficient proof that this symbol has reference to such. Famines and
+pestilences may have occurred many times without forming a part of the
+Apocalyptic vision.
+
+The greatest objection to giving this part of the vision such a literal
+interpretation is, that it fails to bring out its symbolic character. To
+what, then, does it refer? We have, as before, a horseman, indicating
+that the agent is one of the same general character, differing mainly in
+his features and mission. This horse was of a livid, cadaverous hue,
+denoting an agent of ghastly, terrible nature. The living rider bore the
+awful name of "Death," or as in the original, "The Death," by way of
+emphasis. Death literally was not the agent--it is not so stated--but
+the rider was termed The Death, or The Destroyer, because of his
+terrible mission; and Hell followed with him.
+
+Applying the laws of symbolic language as heretofore, it is evident that
+this symbol represents a great persecuting ecclesiastical power. And
+with this thought before us, we can scarcely fail to recognize it as a
+true description of _the Papacy_. The great apostasy, described under
+the preceding seal, prepared the way for the final and complete
+establishment of the "man of sin"; but during the period there brought
+to view the ministers of religion, power-seeking and apostate as they
+were, were unable to enforce their claims by the power of persecution.
+Under the present seal, however, is represented a later stage of their
+corruption, when a great hierarchal system, sustained and upheld by the
+arm of civil power, was able to bear tyrannical rule over a great
+portion of the earth. During this period clerical ambition and
+usurpation reached its greatest height.
+
+After speaking of the power possessed by the metropolitans, Mosheim
+says: "The universal church had now the appearance of one vast republic,
+formed by a combination of a great number of little states. This
+occasioned the creation of a new order of ecclesiastics, who were
+appointed in different parts of the world, as _heads_ of the church, and
+whose office it was to preserve the consistence and union of that
+immense body, whose members were so widely dispersed throughout the
+nations. Such was the nature and office of the Patriarchs." Church
+History, Cent. II, part 2.
+
+Thus, the bishops, or metropolitans, of certain of the most important
+cities were exalted to a still higher position as special _heads_ of the
+church. They were termed _Exarchs_ at first, after the title of the
+provincial governors, but afterwards received the more ecclesiastical
+appellation _Patriarchs_. The term Patriarch had been in use for a long
+time in the church signifying merely a bishop, irrespective of the
+dignity he possessed, but it was finally limited to this higher class of
+the clergy, in which sense I now employ it. The cities that first
+enjoyed this chief distinction were Alexandria, Rome, and Antioch. The
+general council of Nice (A.D. 325) in its sixth canon recognized the
+superior authority already possessed by these cities. See D'Aubigne's
+Hist, of Reformation, Vol. I, p. 41. The general council of
+Constantinople in its third canon placed the bishop of Constantinople in
+the same rank with the other three Patriarchs; and the general council
+of Calcedon exalted the See of Jerusalem to a similar dignity, doubtless
+because of its ancient importance as the birthplace of Christianity.
+Thus, Patriarchs were established in the five political capitals of the
+Roman empire; and they were considered the "_heads of the church_,"
+having spiritual authority over the whole empire. These were the only
+Patriarchates of importance. Certain ecclesiastics of the Church of Rome
+even at the present time bear the honorary title Patriarch; but, to
+quote the words of the Encyclopædia Britannica, "In a strictly technical
+sense, however, that church recognizes only five Patriarchates, those of
+Constantinople, Alexandria, Jerusalem, Antioch, and Rome." Art.
+Patriarch. In the years 637 to 640 Jerusalem, Alexandria, and Antioch
+fell into the hands of the Saracen followers of Mohammed, which
+terminated their importance, and later the Greek schism separated the
+Patriarch of Constantinople from Rome; and thus the Patriarch of Rome
+was left in undisputed possession of the field and was soon recognized
+as universal head of the church. So under the symbol of this dread rider
+on a pale horse is portrayed the great hierarchal system by which the
+Papacy was fully developed in the West.
+
+It is fitting that we notice particularly the agents of destruction
+employed by this rider. He possesses a sword with which to kill--the
+same instrument wielded by the rider of the red horse--but it is evident
+that he uses it with more terrific energy, by reason of which he
+receives the name Death, or The Destroyer. It is possible, also, that in
+this case a sword, wielded by the hand of an ecclesiastical power, may
+be used as a symbol of a spiritual cutting off, or excommunication. The
+sword of excommunication has been the most terrible ever wielded by
+human hand. When this pale horseman was careering over the world in the
+zenith of his power, excommunication and interdiction were the terror of
+individuals and the scourge of nations. At his word the rights of an
+individual as king, ruler, husband or father, nay, even as a _man_, were
+forfeited, and he was shunned like one infected with the leprosy. At his
+command the offices of religion were suspended in a nation, and its dead
+lay unburied, until its proud ruler humbled himself at the feet of the
+ecclesiastical tyrant who bore rule over the "fourth part of the
+earth."[4]
+
+[Footnote 4: This tyranny of the Popes is well illustrated by the
+quarrel that took place between Hildebrand (Pope Gregory VII.) and Henry
+IV. of Germany. Gregory attempted to make certain reforms, but Henry
+refused to recognize those innovations. Gregory excommunicated the
+emperor, with the result that he was "shunned as a man accursed by
+Heaven." His authority lost and his kingdom on the point of going to
+pieces, Henry had but one thing to do--seek the pardon of the Pope. He
+found the Pontiff at Canoosa, but Gregory refused to admit the penitent
+to his presence. "It was winter, and for three successive days the king,
+clothed in sackcloth, stood with bare feet in the snow of the court-yard
+of the palace, waiting for permission to kneel at the feet of the
+Pontiff and to receive forgiveness." On the fourth day he was granted
+admittance to the presence of the Pope.
+
+During the Pontificate of Innocent III. Philip Augustus, king of France,
+put away his wife. Innocent commanded him to take her back and forced
+submission by means of an interdict. This submission of a brave, firm,
+and victorious prince shows the tremendous power wielded by the Popes in
+that period.
+
+The manner, also, in which Innocent III. humbled King John of England
+affords another illustration of the power of the Popes. John caused the
+vacant See of Canterbury to be filled, in accordance with the regular
+manner of election, by one of his favorites. Innocent declared the
+appointment void, as he desired that the place should be filled by one
+of his friends. John refused to allow the Pope's archbishop to enter
+England as Primate. Innocent then excommunicated John, laid all England
+under an interdict, and incited Philip, king of France, to war, offering
+him John's kingdom upon the very liberal condition that he go over and
+take it. The outcome of the matter was that John was compelled to yield
+to the power of the Pope. He even gave him England as a perpetual fief,
+and agreed to pay the Papal See the annual sum of one thousand marks.]
+
+The loss of life by spiritual famine was extreme. The Word of God, which
+is spirit and life to God's people (Jno. 6:63), was laid under interdict
+and the common people deprived of its benefits. At the time the black
+horse appeared, a little food could be obtained at famine prices; but
+when the fourth arrived, he was empowered to kill "with hunger." Also,
+one of his agents of destruction was death, or pestilence, a fit symbol
+of false and blasphemous doctrines breathed forth like a deadly
+pestilence blasting everything within its reach. Invocation of saints,
+worship of images, relics, celibacy, works of supererogation,
+indulgences, and purgatory--these were the enforced principles of
+religion, and like a pest they settled down upon the people everywhere.
+
+This rider also brought into operation "the beasts of the earth" to aid
+him in his destructive work. To kill with sword or hunger shows that
+such work of destruction is performed solely by him who has it in his
+power; but to kill with beasts indicates that _they_ perform the deadly
+work according _to their own natures_. Nothing is clearer than the fact
+that wild beasts stand as a symbol of persecuting tyrannical
+governments; hence we are to understand that this rider was to employ
+also the arm of civil power to aid him in the deadly work. How
+strikingly this represents the historical facts of the case! In all
+truly Roman Catholic countries the civil governments were only a cipher
+or tool in the hands of the church, and the ecclesiastics were the real
+rulers of the kingdom. But whenever any dark work of persecution was to
+be performed, the wild beast was let loose to accomplish the result.
+When charged, however, with the bloody work, the Catholics always
+answer, "Oh, we _never persecute_--don't you see, it is the wild beasts
+that are covered with gore--our hands are clean," yet they themselves
+held the chain that bound the savage monsters. We shall have occasion in
+a subsequent chapter to trace further the pathway of this dread rider as
+he reels onward in the career of ages, "drunken with the blood of the
+saints."
+
+This work of destruction performed by the dread rider on the pale horse
+is considered by many as a literal description of the persecutions of
+the Papacy. While Catholics usually charge the civil powers with this
+bloody work, it is an undeniable fact of history that the Popes often
+ordered or sanctioned crusades against the Waldenses, Albigenses, and
+other peoples (see remarks on verses 9-11, chap. 17:6), in which the
+sword, starvation, and every other means of cruelty imaginable were
+brought into use to exterminate the so-called heresy. And in view of the
+fact explained in the comments on verses 3 and 4 of this chapter, that
+_killing_ is sometimes to be understood in a literal sense on account of
+there being nothing to analagously represent such destruction of life,
+it is not a violation of the laws of symbolic language thus to interpret
+it. It might be consistent in this case to give it a twofold
+application; the agreeing facts of history regarding the Papacy strongly
+suggest it. Thus, the _sword_ could signify a literal destruction of
+life, as in verse 4, and also, in the present case, an ecclesiastical
+cutting off by the Papacy, or excommunication; and _hunger_ could
+signify literal death by starvation, and also, as in verses 5 and 6, a
+destruction of spiritual life, etc.
+
+Where, let me ask, in the whole compass of human writings can be found a
+series of events of such thrilling interest, so great in magnitude, as
+is contained in these eight verses? Who but the Omnipotent could have
+conceived such a wonderful development of the power of iniquity and with
+such master-strokes of power compressed them into so small a scene of
+symbolic imagery? The impress of divinity is here speaking from every
+line.
+
+ 9. And when he had opened the fifth seal, I saw under the altar
+ the souls of them that were slain for the word of God, and for
+ the testimony which they held:
+
+ 10. And they cried with a loud voice, saying, How long, O Lord,
+ holy and true, dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them
+ that dwell on the earth?
+
+ 11. And white robes were given unto every one of them; and it
+ was said unto them, that they should rest yet for a little
+ season, until their fellowservants also and their brethren, that
+ should be killed as they were, should be fulfilled.
+
+Upon the opening of this seal the scene changes entirely. No more
+horsemen appear, but instead the souls of the martyrs are seen at the
+altar crying for vindication of their blood upon the cruel oppressors of
+earth. The question arises, Are these souls symbols of something else,
+or are they what they are here stated to be, "the souls of them that
+were slain"? Evidently, the latter, appearing under their own name and
+character, because they can not properly be symbolized. They were
+disembodied spirits, and where is there anything of analagous character
+to represent such? Angels can not; for whenever they are employed as
+symbols, it is to designate distinguished agencies among men. They
+therefore appear under their own appropriate title as "the _souls_ of
+them that were slain."
+
+These souls appeared "under the altar," that is, _at the foot of the
+altar_, being the same as that described in chap. 8:3--"And another
+angel came and stood at the altar, having a golden censer, and there was
+given unto him much incense, that he should offer it with the prayers of
+all saints upon the golden altar which was before the throne." Thus, the
+heavenly world, as opened up before John, appeared symbolized after the
+sanctuary of the temple in which stood the golden altar, or altar of
+incense. Some have supposed that the brazen altar was the one referred
+to, signifying the living sacrifice these souls made of themselves to
+God. But there is no altar mentioned in the symbols except the golden
+altar. Besides, these were not sacrificial victims; for Christ was made
+a complete sacrifice for sin, while these only suffered martyrdom
+because of their faithfulness to the cause of Christ. It is much more
+reasonable to suppose that their interceding cries went up from the
+golden altar, where the "prayers of all saints" ascended with much
+incense.
+
+Their prayers to God for the avenging of their blood shows the
+expectation on their part that the judgments of Heaven would descend
+upon the cruel and haughty persecutors and oppressors of earth, and
+their surprise was that the day of retribution had been so long delayed.
+The history of the church as developed under the preceding seals gives
+particular force to this cry of the martyrs. For nearly three centuries
+the civil power of Pagan Rome had been employed to crush the cause of
+God. During ten terrible seasons of persecution they had been crucified,
+slain with the sword, sawn asunder, devoured by beasts in the arena, and
+given to the flames. When Constantine, a nominal Christian emperor,
+ascended the throne and protected religion by law, it was believed that
+persecutions must cease; but soon the discovery was made that the sword
+had only changed hands, there having risen an ecclesiastical hierarchy
+destined to "glut itself upon the blood of which heathen Rome had only
+tasted." The world was now made the arena for the terrible coursings of
+the pale horseman, and the "beasts of the earth" were let loose to fall
+with savage fury upon their helpless victims, until millions lost their
+lives at the instigation of the apostate Church of Rome. Is it any
+wonder that the souls of these martyrs should cry unto God for the
+vindication of their righteous blood?
+
+It is said that "white robes were given unto every one of them." By
+referring to chap. 3:4; 7:9, 13, 14, it will be seen that "white
+garments" and "white robes" are sometimes used as a symbol to describe a
+part of the heavenly inheritance. The martyr-spirits, although impatient
+at the delay of avenging judgment, received a righteous reward. But the
+period of tribulation to the church was not yet over. The cup of
+iniquity in the hands of her enemies was not yet full, and they were
+told to "rest for a little season, until their fellowservants also, and
+their brethren, that should be killed as they were, should be
+fulfilled." The account given seems to indicate an important epoch, a
+period in which the martyrs had reason to expect the vindication of
+their righteous blood, but which, instead, was to be followed by another
+great period of persecution. Considering the time of the events already
+described in this series of prophecy, we have no difficulty in fixing
+the chronology of this event at the dividing-point between the era of
+Papal supremacy and the age of Protestantism--or at the Reformation of
+the Sixteenth Century. Did severe slaughter and persecution follow the
+Reformation? Witness the reign of Mary Tudor, frequently styled "Bloody
+Mary." During three years of her reign, 1555 to 1558, two hundred and
+eighty-eight were _burnt alive_ in England! Think of the inhuman
+massacre of the innocent Waldenses of southern France by the violent
+bigot Oppede (1545), who slew eight hundred men in one town, and thrust
+the women into a barn filled with straw and reduced the whole to
+ashes--only a sample of his barbarity; or of their oppression in
+southern Italy by Pope Pius IV. (1560), at whose command they were slain
+by thousands, the throats of eighty-eight men being cut on one occasion
+by a single executioner! Witness the horrible massacre of St.
+Bartholomew in Paris (Aug. 21, 1572), when the Queen dowager, the
+infamous Catherine de Medici, lured immense numbers of the innocent
+Hugenots into the city under the pretext of witnessing a marriage
+between the Hugenot Henry, king of Navarre, and the sister of Charles
+IX., king of France--when the gates were closed and the work of
+wholesale slaughter began at a given signal and raged for three days,
+during which time from six to ten thousand were butchered in Paris
+alone! Think of the rivers of blood in the Netherlands, where the Duke
+of Alva boasted that in the short space of six weeks he had put eighteen
+thousand to death! Witness the dragoonading methods and other inhuman
+persecutions to "wear out the saints of the Most High," that followed
+the revocation of the Edict of Nantes (1685) by Louis XIV., king of
+France, during whose reign three hundred thousand were brutally
+butchered--while Pope Innocent XI. extolled the king by special letter
+as follows: "The Catholic church shall most assuredly record in her
+sacred annals a _work of such devotion toward her_, and CELEBRATE YOUR
+NAME WITH NEVER-DYING PRAISES ... for _this most excellent
+undertaking_"!! My heart sickens with horror in the contemplation of
+such events. Eternal God! can thy righteous eye behold such
+heart-rending scenes of earth, and thy hand of power not be extended to
+humble to the dust these cruel, haughty oppressors of thy people?
+
+ 12. And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal, and, lo,
+ there was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as
+ sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as blood;
+
+ 13. And the stars of heaven fell unto the earth, even as a
+ fig-tree casteth her untimely figs, when she is shaken of a
+ mighty wind.
+
+ 14. And the heaven departed as a scroll when it is rolled
+ together; and every mountain and island were moved out of their
+ places.
+
+ 15. And the kings of the earth, and the great men, and the rich
+ men, and the chief captains, and the mighty men, and every
+ bondman, and every free man, hid themselves in the dens and in
+ the rocks of the mountains;
+
+ 16. And said to the mountains and rocks, Fall on us, and hide us
+ from the face of him that sitteth on the throne, and from the
+ wrath of the Lamb;
+
+ 17. For the great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be
+ able to stand?
+
+Upon the opening of this seal the scene changes again. The symbols are
+all drawn from an entirely different source. We are taken out of the
+department of civil life into the scenes of nature, which is a clear
+evidence that the history of the church is no longer under
+consideration. Had God intended to here continue her history, he would
+no doubt have employed symbols derived from the same source as those
+preceding, so as to prevent our being led astray. No more horsemen or
+living characters appear, but we behold the most terrific convulsions of
+nature--a mighty earthquake, the darkening of the sun and the moon, the
+falling of the stars, and finally the dissolution of the heavens,
+together with the mountains and the islands being removed. If the
+history of the church is no longer under consideration, this great
+change of symbols directs us with absolute certainty into the political
+and civil world for their fulfilment. Of course, we are not to suppose
+that this is a literal description.
+
+In this manner the dignity and the excellence in the use and the
+interpretation of symbols is preserved. To describe the religious
+history of the church, noble symbols chosen from the department of human
+life are selected; while symbols drawn from an inferior department--that
+of nature--are chosen to represent political affairs. This point will
+appear very clear as we proceed in the interpretation of the Apocalypse.
+It is just what we might naturally expect.
+
+The question may be asked, If these symbols from nature represent
+political affairs, where in the events of civil history shall we look
+for their fulfilment? Every one will readily perceive the analogy
+between an earthquake and a political revolution, when all society is in
+a state of agitation as when the solid earth trembles. It is also
+evident that the sun, moon, and stars bear the same analagous
+relationship to the earth that kings, rulers, and princes do to the body
+politic; while the firmament of heaven is analagous to the entire fabric
+of civil government, the symbolic heaven in which the symbolic orbs are
+set to give light.
+
+The symbols, then, point us to the most terrible revolutions--when
+society is in a state of agitation, when kingdoms are overthrown and
+their rulers and princes thrown from their positions or made objects of
+the most gloomy terror; yea, when the entire fabric of civil government
+is finally overthrown and all the institutions and organizations of
+society are swept away as with a tornado. This is the time of
+consternation to the great men of earth, when they shall hide
+"themselves in the dens and in the rocks of the mountains," and say to
+the mountains and rocks, "Fall on us and hide us from the face of him
+that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb: for the
+great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be able to stand?" This is
+the time that the martyrs looked forward to when they cried, "How long,
+O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them
+that dwell on the earth?" A large portion of the Apocalypse is occupied
+with the history of these persecuting powers, civil and ecclesiastical.
+It is their dominacy that constitutes the long period of tribulation to
+the church, when the witnesses prophesy in sackcloth and the faithful
+are ground into the dust by the feet of these proud oppressors as they
+stand in the high places of the earth. But the cries of the slaughtered
+saints have ascended to the throne as incense; God speaks; the judgments
+of Heaven descend upon these lofty ones; and a voice from heaven
+declares, "They have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and _thou
+hast given them blood to drink_; for they are worthy."
+
+This is surely a striking combination of symbols, and the way they are
+arranged would indicate that their fulfilment occupied a considerable
+period of time. First we have a great earthquake, afterwards the
+darkening of the sun and the moon, with the falling of the stars, and
+finally the dissolution of the heavens themselves, with the sweeping
+away of mountains and islands. This description covers the same period
+as that described under the seven last plagues, beginning with certain
+fearful revolutions in which the nations that had slaughtered the
+millions of God's people were given "blood to drink," and ending finally
+in "the great day of his wrath" that shall sweep them from their
+positions eternally. The full explanation of these events can not at
+present be appreciated by the reader, therefore I reserve it for the
+future, to be more fully developed under other symbols.
+
+In these six seals we have a vivid outline of mighty events, political
+and ecclesiastical, extending from the earliest stage of Christianity to
+the end of time. This description in advance was no mere human
+production. No human foresight would have detected, and no mortal mind
+would have conceived, events so wonderful and so farreaching in their
+character. Any other history would sooner have been imagined. It takes
+divine wisdom to understand the true position of the church in the
+present, and she can scarcely read her past history by natural wisdom
+alone, much less outline the future. First the establishment of
+Christianity is symbolized, then the violence of the Pagan party, the
+apostasy, and final establishment of the "man of sin," until the
+millions of earth are crushed by the spiritual tyranny or by the arm of
+civil power, and the cry of the martyrs goes up "How long, O Lord?" But
+they are told to rest "a little season," when they shall witness the
+hand of God laid upon these persecuting nations of earth, convulsing
+them in the most fearful revolutions, and ending finally in their
+complete overthrow in that last "great day of God Almighty."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+ And after these things I saw four angels standing on the four
+ corners of the earth, holding the four winds of the earth, that
+ the wind should not blow on the earth, nor on the sea, nor on
+ any tree.
+
+ 2. And I saw another angel ascending from the east, having the
+ seal of the living God: and he cried with a loud voice to the
+ four angels, to whom it was given to hurt the earth and the sea.
+
+ 3. Saying, Hurt not the earth, neither the sea, nor the trees,
+ till we have sealed the servants of our God in their foreheads.
+
+ 4. And I heard the number of them which were sealed: and there
+ were sealed an hundred and forty and four thousand of all the
+ tribes of the children of Israel.
+
+ 5. Of the tribe of Juda were sealed twelve thousand. Of the
+ tribe of Reuben were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Gad
+ were sealed twelve thousand.
+
+ 6. Of the tribe of Aser were sealed twelve thousand. Of the
+ tribe of Nepthalim were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of
+ Manasses were sealed twelve thousand.
+
+ 7. Of the tribe of Simeon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the
+ tribe of Levi were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of
+ Issachar were sealed twelve thousand.
+
+ 8. Of the tribe of Zabulon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the
+ tribe of Joseph were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of
+ Benjamin were sealed twelve thousand.
+
+A clear understanding of the two visions in the chapter before us can be
+obtained only by considering the plan of the prophecy already referred
+to. The events are narrated by series. A particular theme is taken up
+and followed through to its completion; then the narrative returns and
+another theme is introduced. But this is not all. Whenever the history
+of abounding error or iniquity is set forth, we have in immediate
+connection and in perfect contrast therewith a history of the true
+people of God; thus, the contemporaneous history of righteousness and
+iniquity, truth and error, a true church and a false one. The visions of
+this chapter cover the same period of time as the events described in
+the preceding chapter, but form the most perfect contrast. The student
+of Revelation who unfolds the dark history of apostasy and iniquity
+contained in the preceding seals might naturally be led to ask, Is this
+the melancholy end of God's church? Does it deteriorate rapidly and turn
+out so badly, after all? As an answer to these questions, God gives us
+next a history of his own people, showing that he preserved his own
+church complete, although Antichrist reigned in power.
+
+The principal points in the vision before us are the tempestuous winds
+about to descend upon the earth, and the sealing of God's servants. The
+first of these, being drawn from nature, would lead us to look for its
+fulfilment in political events; while the latter, derived from human
+life, directs us into the affairs of the church. The "four winds of the
+earth" from the "four corners of the earth" signify all the winds from
+every direction--the cardinal points of the compass; while the four
+angels signify all the agencies that have control of these winds, which
+for the present are held in restraint in order to give opportunity for
+the sealing of the Lord's servants. _Angels_ in the Scripture is
+frequently used to denote evil agencies as well as good, the context
+determining which is meant. See Chap. 12:7. The design of the winds was
+to "hurt the earth, the sea, and the trees."
+
+What, let me ask, in the political world is analagous to tempestuous
+storms sweeping over the earth? What but huge masses of men, excited by
+fierce passions, precipitating themselves upon the inhabitants of an
+empire, sweeping everything before them in the fury of their march and
+spreading desolation on every side? In the symbols of the next chapter
+we find that just such hordes of men--barbarians--under their angels, or
+leaders, precipitated themselves upon the Roman empire; and the fearful
+effects upon the earth, the sea, and the green trees produced thereby,
+is particularly detailed. For the present, however, they are held under
+restraint until the sealing of the servants of God should be
+accomplished, then they were to go forward in their work of destruction.
+
+The sealing of the servants is not making them the people of God, but
+rather marking or designating them as such, just as later we find the
+devotees of a corrupt apostate church specified as having the "mark of
+the beast." Considerable light can be thrown upon the subject of the
+sealing of God's servants and of the mark of the beast by consulting
+Roman history for the origin of such expressions. The many conquests of
+the Roman arms furnished so many prisoners that they became a drug in
+the slave-markets of the world, and were so numerous that in many places
+they outnumbered the Roman citizens ten to one. In the first century
+before Christ it is said that some Sicilian estates were worked by as
+many as twenty thousand slaves. "That each owner might know his own, the
+poor creatures were _branded like cattle_." The "mark of the beast"
+possessed by the followers of a false communion will be found to consist
+of an Antichristian spirit by which they are filled with "doctrines of
+devils." So, also, "the seal of the living God" consists of the giving
+of the Holy Spirit, by which his people are led into all truth. See John
+14:26. While Sabbatarians vainly try to prove that keeping the seventh
+day is the seal of God in this dispensation, yet there is not one text
+of Scripture that hints such a thing, but, on the contrary, the
+Scriptures are against them. "Grieve not the _Holy Spirit_ of God
+whereby _ye are sealed_ unto the day of redemption." Eph. 4:30. Again,
+the Word of God says, "Now he which stablished us with you in Christ,
+and hath anointed us is God; who hath also sealed us, and given the
+earnest of the Spirit in our hearts." 2 Cor. 1:21, 22. The time this
+sealing of the people of God takes place is thus described: "_After_
+that ye believed, ye were _sealed_ with that Holy Spirit of promise."
+Eph. 1:13. The winds of heaven were restrained until the work of _full
+salvation_ could be firmly established in the earth. When Christ
+appeared, the Roman empire was in a state of comparative quiet, and the
+immense hosts of foreign invaders did not appear until the firm
+establishment of Christianity, being held back by the power of God until
+his work should be accomplished.
+
+In the description of the sealing given, twelve thousand were selected
+from each of the twelve tribes. Some have supposed this to have
+reference solely to salvation work among the Jewish nation; but that
+would be adopting the literal mode of interpretation, thus destroying
+its symbolic character. The twelve tribes are chosen from the proper
+department to represent the church or "Israel of God" in this
+dispensation, irrespective of nationality. The twelve gates in the wall
+of the heavenly city are named after the twelve tribes of the children
+of Israel (chap. 21:12), showing that it is only through "Israel" that
+any one can enter the New Jerusalem. Since the gospel is given to all
+nations, this can not signify literal Israel. "The children of the
+promise are counted for the seed." Rom. 9:8. "If ye be Christ's, then
+are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise." Gal. 3:29.
+Since the vision is symbolical, we are to consider the numbers given as
+symbolical also, the definite number of twelve thousand from each of the
+tribes showing that the church of God was _complete and perfect_, no
+part being omitted.
+
+ 9. After this I beheld, and, lo, a great multitude, which no man
+ could number, of all nations, and kindreds, and people, and
+ tongues, stood before the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed
+ with white robes, and palms in their hands;
+
+ 10. And cried with a loud voice, saying, Salvation to our God
+ which sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb.
+
+ 11. And all the angels stood round about the throne, and about
+ the elders and the four beasts, and fell before the throne on
+ their faces, and worshipped God,
+
+ 12. Saying, Amen: Blessing, and glory, and wisdom, and
+ thanksgiving, and honor, and power, and might, be unto our God
+ for ever and ever. Amen.
+
+ 13. And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, What are
+ these which are arrayed in white robes? and whence came they?
+
+ 14. And I said unto him, Sir, thou knowest. And he said to me,
+ These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have
+ washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the
+ Lamb.
+
+ 15. Therefore are they before the throne of God, and serve him
+ day and night in his temple: and he that sitteth on the throne
+ shall dwell among them.
+
+ 16. They shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; neither
+ shall the sun light on them, nor any heat.
+
+ 17. For the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed
+ them, and shall lead them unto living mountains of waters: and
+ God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.
+
+In this scene the vision is carried forward to the close of the long
+period of tribulation and persecution to the church of God, when all her
+enemies are finally overthrown; and here are the glorious results, the
+harvest gathered: a great multitude whom no man can number, gathered out
+of all nations, and kindreds, and peoples, and tongues, standing before
+the throne and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in
+their hands, the symbols of their victory. The scene is laid in heaven,
+and refers undoubtedly to the end of time when the heavenly world will
+be opened up to all the faithful who have suffered for Christ amid the
+trials and the oppositions through which his church is called to pass in
+this present world. We are expressly informed by one of the elders who
+these are in white robes and whence they came, so there can be no
+question respecting them. This is the glorious company of the redeemed
+of all ages who "came out of great tribulation, and have washed their
+robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. Therefore they are
+before the throne of God, and serve him day and night in his temple; and
+he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them. They shall hunger
+no more, neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun light on them,
+nor any heat." What a contrast with the scenes of earth, when oppressed
+by famine, and cold, and nakedness, and peril, and sword, they were
+killed all the day long! But their sufferings are over; "for the Lamb
+which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and shall lead them
+unto living fountains of waters and God shall wipe away all tears from
+their eyes."
+
+This redeemed company is represented as uniting in a song of praise and
+thanksgiving to God for bringing them through their long period of
+trial, "saying Salvation to our God which sitteth upon the throne, and
+unto the Lamb"; while heaven resounds with universal praise as the
+angels and all the redeemed host take up the chorus and swell the mighty
+anthem "saying, Amen; blessing, and glory, and wisdom and thanksgiving,
+and honor, and power, and might be unto our God forever and ever. Amen."
+
+It is clear that, in this chapter and the one preceding, we have two
+grand parallel and comprehensive histories--in one, the process of
+corruption in the so-called church and the final judgments that overtook
+these cruel persecutors of the Lord's people; in the other, the setting
+apart and sealing of God's servants, their preservation from the
+contaminations of an apostate church, and the final glorious triumph of
+all who endure unto the end.
+
+This vision has often been applied in a figurative manner to the
+spiritual reign of God's people on earth before the end of time--that
+they are overcomers through the blood of Christ, that God dwells with
+them in his church, that their spiritual needs are all supplied so they
+hunger and thirst no more--but a careful study of the plan of the
+prophecy will show that its real signification is the heavenly state at
+the end. As the sixth seal describes the final overthrow of all the
+antichristian powers that have oppressed God's people on earth; so this
+vision describes the great white-robed company gathered out of every
+nation, kindred, tongue, and people, who have been preserved faithful
+through all these trials and tribulations, and who receive at last the
+crown of everlasting life. This last vision will be more fully described
+under certain symbols contained in the last two chapters of this book;
+while the earthquake, the falling of the stars, etc., of the sixth seal
+will be more perfectly detailed in chapters 15 and 16.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+ And when he had opened the seventh seal, there was silence in
+ heaven about the space of half an hour.
+
+ 2. And I saw the seven angels which stood before God; and to
+ them were given seven trumpets.
+
+ 3. And another angel came and stood at the altar, having a
+ golden censer; and there was given unto him much incense, that
+ he should offer it with the prayers of all saints upon the
+ golden altar which was before the throne.
+
+ 4. And the smoke of the incense, which came with the prayers of
+ the saints, ascended up before God out of the angel's hand.
+
+ 5. And the angel took the censer, and filled it with fire of the
+ altar, and cast it into the earth: and there were voices, and
+ thunderings, and lightnings, and an earthquake.
+
+The remainder of the book is embraced in the contents of the seventh
+seal. This may appear a little singular at first, being so much larger
+than the preceding ones. But it is easily understood when we consider
+the six as being a synopsis of the whole book, containing a history of
+the church apostate to the final consummation, and also the
+contemporaneous history of the truth church of God; while the seventh
+gives in detail the account of these great persecuting powers, civil and
+ecclesiastical, and the trials and triumphs of the saints in the New
+Jerusalem--developing more fully the events described under the six.
+
+Upon the opening of the seventh seal, "there was silence in heaven about
+the space of half an hour." Whether this interval of silence is intended
+to be symbolical of any event on earth I do not know; neither have I
+seen any solution of the matter that is consistent or satisfactory. Some
+have supposed that it denoted a cessation of persecution among the
+Christians of earth. But if that were the case, then its opposite,
+"voices in heaven," would indicate seasons of persecution. There were
+several seasons of rest from persecution enjoyed by the early saints,
+and why should one period be singled out more than the rest and be thus
+described? Besides, "a half hour," according to prophetic time would
+signify only about one week, a period too short certainly to take
+account of. Others have supposed that it signified the end of the world,
+and that heaven would then be deserted for a short time while the
+judgment was taking place. But the events following show that the end of
+the world is not here described, therefore it can not have reference to
+such. Moreover, it is extremely doubtful whether silence in heaven would
+be a proper symbol of such an event. I do not perceive the analogy. In
+fact, such an interpretation of _silence_ would be literal and not
+symbolic.
+
+Its explanation would seem to be found in connection with certain facts
+stated respecting the opening of the preceding seals--that voices
+followed them. When the first four seals were opened, John heard the
+voices of the four beasts, "as it were a voice of thunder"; and on the
+opening of the fifth, he heard the souls of the martyrs crying unto God;
+but when the seventh was opened, there was silence for a time. The
+contrast is noticeable; but whether it has any special signification, I
+am unable to say; perhaps not.
+
+Before the sounding of the seven trumpets, the acceptableness of the
+prayers of the saints is represented by an angel offering incense "upon
+the golden altar which was before the throne." This scene was doubtless
+introduced to lend encouragement to God's children--that, although
+iniquity abounded on every side and the judgments of God were poured out
+upon the people, still the prayers of the faithful few were acceptable
+in his sight, ascending before the throne like sweet incense from off
+the golden altar.
+
+After offering up the incense with the prayers of all saints, the same
+angel took his censer and filled it with fire from off the altar and
+cast it (the fire) upon the earth--a token of God's avenging
+judgments--"and there were voices, and thunderings, and lightnings, and
+an earthquake." These, of course, were on earth, and symbolized the
+revolutions and convulsions now about to take place in the empire.
+
+ 6. And the seven angels which had the seven trumpets prepared
+ themselves to sound.
+
+ 7. The first angel sounded, and there followed hail and fire
+ mingled with blood, and they were cast upon the earth: and the
+ third part of trees was burnt up, and all green grass was burnt
+ up.
+
+We here enter upon a series of prophecies developing fully the
+successive steps in the decline of the Western Roman empire, by which it
+finally tottered to its fall. It was necessary that this persecuting,
+tyrannical government should be subverted in order to give opportunity
+for the establishment of apostate Christianity in the form of the
+Papacy, as it constituted the "let" or hindrance to the full development
+of the "man of sin" mentioned by the apostle in 2 Thes. 2. That
+persecuting, Pagan Rome was a serious obstacle confronting the
+development of apostasy was recognized even by the early Christians.
+Thus, Tertullian, in his notable Apology, chapter 32, says: "Christians
+are under a particular necessity of praying for the emperors, and for
+the continued state of the empire; because we know that dreadful power
+which hangs over the world, and _the conclusion of the age, which
+threatens the most horrible evils, is restrained by the continuance of
+the time appointed for the Roman empire_. This is what we would not
+experience; and while we pray that it may be deferred, we hereby show
+our good-will to the perpetuity of the Roman state." In a subsequent
+chapter it will be seen that Pagan Rome, broken up into minor divisions
+and no longer able to maintain her position in the political world,
+resigns her power and authority into the hands of the rising Papacy.
+Therefore it is not surprising that the means by which this great change
+is effected should be made the subject of prophetic revelation. Besides,
+we have other things to guide us in the interpretation. We can readily
+identify the symbols under the fifth trumpet with the curse of
+Mohammedanism in the Eastern empire, and we would naturally suppose that
+the first four precede those. Again, the symbols are all drawn from the
+natural world, which leads us assuredly into the political affairs of
+the empire for their fulfilment. They are also of the most destructive
+nature, therefore we look for objects of a corresponding desolating
+character. Finally, the vision of the preceding chapter represents
+fierce, destructive winds as about to descend upon the earth, being
+temporarily held in check to give opportunity for the primitive
+establishment of Christianity, implying that they would afterwards be
+let loose to burst like a tornado upon the empire. It is said positively
+that power was given "to hurt the earth and the sea" (chap. 7:2), and in
+the vision before us the effects produced upon the earth and the trees
+are particularly detailed.
+
+"The earth" signifies the Roman empire, or that portion of the earth
+made the subject of apocalyptic vision. That this application of the
+word _earth_ is correct, is shown by various Scriptures. "And it came to
+pass in those days, that there went out a decree from Cæsar Augustus
+that _all the world_ should be taxed." Luke 2:1. "The queen of the South
+... came from the _uttermost parts of the earth_ [southern Arabia] to
+hear the wisdom of Solomon." Mat. 12:42. "Ye shall be witnesses ... unto
+the _uttermost part of the earth_." Acts 1:8. The apostles carried the
+gospel personally, only throughout the territory of the then-known
+civilized world--the Roman empire. Upon this earth there descended in
+the vision before us a fierce storm of hail and fire, mingled with
+blood. Its being mingled with blood would indicate its destructive
+effects. One characteristic of this symbol particularly is worthy of
+notice. Hail and fire cast upon the earth would become absorbed speedily
+or pass into new combinations with the surrounding elements, thus not
+remaining in any permanent form except in its effects. In this
+particular it is wholly unlike the symbol of the next trumpet, which is
+that of a burning mountain cast into the sea, for such a body would
+naturally remain permanently where it fell; whereas a storm of hail and
+fire would soon disappear. Also, the statement that this storm was cast
+upon the earth would indicate that it was a calamity descending from
+without upon the empire.
+
+Where, now, do we find the object that fully meets the requirements of
+this symbol--destructive agents descending upon the Roman empire like a
+furious storm of hail and fire, accomplishing the first important step
+toward the subverting of the empire? We find it in the irruption of the
+fierce Gothic tribes of the North, who, under Alaric, burst like a
+tornado upon the empire about the beginning of the fifth century,
+spreading destruction and desolation upon every side.
+
+The following quotations and facts from the highest authority on the
+subject, Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (Vol. III, pp.
+190-294), will give the reader an idea of the awful effects produced by
+the invasions of these barbarous tribes. The great Theodosius, emperor
+of the Western Roman empire, "had supported the frail and mouldering
+edifice of the republic," but upon his death he was succeeded by the
+weak Honorious. In a few months the Gothic barbarians were in arms. "The
+barriers of the Danube were thrown down, the savage warriors of Scythia
+issued from their forests ... and the various tribes of barbarians, who
+glory in the Gothic name, were irregularly spread over the woody shores
+of Dalmatia to the walls of Constantinople." They were "directed by the
+bold and artful genius of Alaric," who soon concluded that the conquest
+of Constantinople was an impracticable enterprise. He "disdained to
+trample any longer on the prostrate and ruined countries of Thrace and
+Dacia, and he resolved to seek a plentiful harvest of fame and riches in
+a province which had hitherto escaped the ravages of war.... The troops
+which had been posted to defend the straits of Thermopylæ retired ...
+without attempting to disturb the secure and rapid passage of Alaric;
+and the fertile fields of Phocis and Bæotia were instantly covered by a
+deluge of barbarians, who massacred the males of an age to bear arms,
+and drove away the beautiful females, with the spoil and cattle of the
+flaming villages. The travelers who visited Greece several years
+afterwards, could easily discover the deep and bloody traces of the
+march of the Goths.... The whole territory of Attica, from the
+promontory of Sunium to the town of Megara, was blasted by his baleful
+presence; and, if we may use the comparison of a contemporary
+philosopher, Athens itself resembled the bleeding and empty skin of a
+slaughtered victim.... Corinth, Argos, Sparta, yielded without
+resistance to the arms of the Goths; and the most fortunate of the
+inhabitants were saved, by death, from beholding the slavery of their
+families and the conflagration of their cities."
+
+Arcadius, the emperor of the East, wishing to dissuade Alaric from
+further conquests and such wholesale massacres, promoted him to the rank
+of Master-general of the eastern Illyricum, but it had an opposite
+effect. "The birth of Alaric, the glory of his past exploits, and the
+confidence in his future designs, insensibly united the body of the
+[Gothic] nation under his victorious standard; and, with the unanimous
+consent of the barbarian chieftains, the Master-general of Illyricum was
+elevated, according to the ancient custom, on a shield, and solemnly
+proclaimed king of the Visigoths. Armed with this double power, situated
+on the verge of the two empires, he alternately sold his deceitful
+promises to the courts of Arcadius and Honorious; until he declared and
+executed his resolution of _invading the dominions of the West_.... He
+was tempted by the fame, the beauty, the wealth of Italy, which he had
+twice visited; and he secretly aspired to plant the Gothic standard on
+the walls of Rome, and to enrich his army with the accumulated spoils of
+three hundred triumphs." He marched into Italy, and the emperor fled
+before him. A temporary respite was finally procured by the promise of a
+payment of four thousand pounds of gold.
+
+Alaric soon appeared, however, before the very walls of Rome, and that
+splendid city, surrounded by hordes of barbarians, was soon reduced to a
+wretched condition by famine. Two representatives of the Romans waited
+upon Alaric for terms of peace, stating that if such could not be
+arranged the inhabitants of the city, animated by despair, would fight
+to the bitter end. To this the haughty conqueror made this famous reply:
+"The thicker the grass, the easier it is mowed." With an insulting
+laugh, he named the ransom required--all the gold and silver contained
+in the city, all the rich and precious movables, together with all the
+slaves. Then the ministers humbly asked, "What do you intend to leave
+us?" "Your lives," the haughty king replied, and retired. He finally
+relaxed a little and fixed other terms, which included the immediate
+payment of the enormous sum of five thousand pounds of gold, thirty
+thousand pounds of silver, besides other treasure. "The victorious
+leader, who united the daring spirit of a barbarian with the art and
+discipline of a Roman general, was at the head of a hundred thousand
+fighting men; and Italy pronounced, with terror and respect, the
+formidable name of Alaric."
+
+A second time Rome was besieged by Alaric and taken. Honorious was
+deposed and Attalus made emperor; but Honorious was afterwards restored.
+In A.D. 410 he again marched upon the city, captured and entered it.
+"Eleven hundred and sixty-three years after the foundation of Rome, the
+imperial city, which had subdued and civilized so considerable a part of
+mankind, was delivered to the licentious fury of the tribes of Germania
+and Scythia." For six days the city was sacked by the barbarous
+soldiery, and the horrible scenes of robbery, murder, and rapine that
+ensued can not be described. It has been said that "civilized warfare is
+sufficiently terrible," but that would be almost a blessing compared
+with such scenes as these. For a space of four years Alaric ravaged
+Italy almost without opposition.
+
+The slaughter and devastation that followed this storm of "hail and
+fire" is thus described: "The banks of the Rhine were crowned like those
+of the Tiber, with houses and well-cultivated farms; and if a poet
+descended the river, he might express his doubts on which side was
+situated the territory of the Romans. This scene of peace and plenty was
+suddenly changed into a desert, and the prospect of the smoking ruins
+could alone distinguish the solitude of nature from the desolation of
+man. The flourishing city of Mentz was surprised and destroyed, and many
+thousand Christians inhumanly massacred in the church. Wurms perished
+after a long and obstinate siege. Strasburg, Spires, Rheims, Tournay,
+Arras, Amiens, experienced the cruel oppression of the German yoke, and
+the consuming flames of war spread from the banks of the Rhine over the
+greatest part of the seventeen provinces of Gaul. That rich and
+extensive country, as far as the ocean, the Alps and the Pyrenees, was
+delivered to the barbarians, who drove before them, in a promiscuous
+crowd, the bishop, the senator and the virgin, laden with the spoils of
+their houses and altars."
+
+Another historian describing the same, a few years after the event,
+says: "The barbarians meeting with little resistance, indulged in the
+utmost cruelty. The cities which they captured, they so utterly
+destroyed that no traces of them now remain, except in Thrace and
+Greece, except here and there a tower or a gate. All the men who opposed
+them they slew, young and old, and indeed spared not women, nor even
+children. Whence there is still but a sparse population in Italy. The
+plunder which they seized in every part of Europe was immense, and
+especially at Rome, where they left nothing, either public or private."
+In this latter description reference is also made to some later
+invasions, but they were all of the same desolating character.
+
+These historical facts show how the green grass, or the feebler portion
+of society--the tender sex, the young, and the aged--were consumed
+before this fearful storm of hail and fire; and also how the trees, or
+the stronger portion--those better able to make resistance--suffered
+greatly.
+
+It is also a fact to be observed that these fierce tribes which overran
+Italy, harassed or captured Rome repeatedly, and threatened the
+overthrow of the empire, made no permanent settlement in that territory.
+"Under Alaric the Goths make no lasting settlement. In the long tale of
+intrigue and warfare between the Goths and the two Imperial courts which
+fills up this whole time, cessions of territory are offered to the
+Goths, provinces are occupied by them, but as yet they do not take root
+anywhere; no Western land as yet becomes Gothia,"--Encyclopædia
+Britannica, Art. Goths. After the death of Alaric (A.D. 412), however,
+they settled in the southern part of Spain and Gaul[5]--part of the
+territory of the West--but they no longer threatened the life of the
+empire; but, on the contrary, they became allies of the Romans in
+opposing the dreadful incursions of the Huns and other barbarians. Thus
+their invasion of the West was at first terribly destructive--like a
+storm of hail and fire--but their ravages soon ceased, except in their
+disastrous and weakening effects.
+
+[Footnote 5: This division of the Gothic tribes is commonly called the
+Visigoths (Western Goths), as distinguished from the Ostrogoths, or
+Eastern Goths.]
+
+ 8. And the second angel sounded, and as it were a great mountain
+ burning with fire was cast into the sea: and the third part of
+ the sea became blood;
+
+ 9. And the third part of the creatures which were in the sea,
+ and had life, died; and the third part of the ships were
+ destroyed.
+
+The symbol of this trumpet is that of a volcanic mountain cast into the
+sea, whence it sends forth its streams of lava in every direction until
+a third of the creatures in the sea are destroyed, thus spreading
+desolation on every side. It would naturally remain where it fell, a
+permanent instrument of destruction.
+
+We have here a description of the next step of importance in the
+downfall of the Western empire. The second great invasion was that of
+"the terrible Genseric" with his Vandal hordes, who pushed southward
+through Gaul and Spain, conquered the Carthaginian territory of northern
+Africa, and there formed a permanent independent government in A.D. 439.
+From this fixed place, he continued for years to make incursions upon
+the bordering cities and islands, burning the cities, murdering the
+inhabitants, and intercepting the commerce of the Mediterranean. During
+his military career, 429-468, he became the terror of the inhabitants of
+the empire, insomuch that historians designate him "the terrible
+Genseric." The depredations committed by his followers were but a
+repetition of such scenes of barbarity as have already been described in
+the invasions of Alaric under the first trumpet, therefore I will not
+devote much space to the historical facts in the case. Their deeds,
+however, were such that the very term _Vandal_ has come to be used as a
+designation of any man of ferocious character. Concerning the important
+part that this chieftain acted in the downfall of the Western empire,
+Gibbon uses this significant language: "Genseric, a name which, in the
+destruction of the Roman empire, has deserved an equal rank with the
+names of Alaric and Attila." Vol. III, p. 370.
+
+In the year 454 the empress Eudoxia wished to be revenged on Maximus,
+who had murdered her husband Valentinian and had grasped the throne, and
+she secretly invited Genseric to attack Rome. That fierce general, who
+is described by the Encyclopædia Britannica as "cruel to
+blood-thirstiness, cunning, unscrupulous, and grasping," was glad to
+undertake the task, and he soon landed an army of Vandals and African
+Moors at the gates of the city. It was soon taken and for fifteen days
+given over to be sacked by the barbarous soldiery. When they had glutted
+their savage instincts with the horrible deeds of murder and rapine,
+loaded with the spoils of the imperial city, they returned to Africa,
+taking with them an immense number of captives, including Eudoxia and
+her two daughters. This desolating incursion left the empire weak and
+tottering to its fall. Genseric "became the tyrant of the sea; the
+coasts of Italy, Greece, and Asia, were again exposed to his revenge and
+avarice. Tripoli and Sardinia returned to his obedience; he added Sicily
+to the number of his provinces; and before he died, in the fulness of
+years and glory, he beheld the FINAL EXTINCTION of the empire of the
+West." Gibbon, Vol. III, pp. 497, 498.
+
+By "the sea" into which this burning mountain was cast is meant, not the
+Mediterranean nor any other literal sea, but the heart of the empire,
+and that in a state of agitation. The empire was in a state of
+comparative quiet when Alaric appeared; therefore the storm of hail and
+fire is represented as falling upon "the earth," as a result of which
+society was thrown into a state of great agitation, and moved to its
+depths, like an ocean in a storm. This was its condition when Genseric,
+from his fixed position in Africa, began his desolating incursions;
+therefore the next symbol is that of a mountain cast into "the sea." By
+the sea becoming blood is doubtless meant the destruction of life in the
+empire, and "the third part" denotes the vast extent of the destruction.
+
+I must speak with hesitation on what is signified by "the creatures
+which were in the sea" and the "ships." By analogy I would be led to
+refer the former to the rulers and the dignitaries in the empire, they
+bearing an analagous position to the empire that fishes do to the waters
+of the sea; while the latter may refer to public monuments and
+structures.
+
+ 10. And the third angel sounded, and there fell a great star
+ from heaven, burning as it were a lamp, and it fell upon the
+ third part of the rivers, and upon the fountains of waters;
+
+ 11. And the name of the star is called Wormwood: and the third
+ part of the waters became wormwood; and many men died of the
+ waters, because they were made bitter.
+
+The description given of this star is similar to that of a large burning
+meteor, such as we frequently see shooting athwart the heavens. It fell
+rapidly to earth, as such meteors often do, and struck the
+fountain-heads of the rivers, imparting to them such a poisonous quality
+as caused the death of those who drank the waters.
+
+This symbol is also drawn from the natural world, and hence we must look
+for its fulfilment in political events. The rapidity of its fall and
+disappearance in the waters would direct us to an agent who would appear
+suddenly and soon disappear, and whose career would leave bitter
+results. The direct effects of this meteor were experienced by the
+rivers and the fountains of waters, which bear an analagous relation to
+the sea that bordering tribes and nations do to an empire. The heart of
+the empire, or "the sea," was directly affected by the burning mountain,
+under the preceding trumpet; while the tributaries of the sea, or the
+bordering tribes, are made the subject of direct attack under this
+symbol and the poisonous qualities of their waters carried to far
+distant points.
+
+Under this striking symbol we have a description of the third important
+step in the downward course of Rome--the short but eventful career of
+Attila, with his terrible Scythians, or Huns. Singularly, Attila was
+said to "possess the iron sword of the war-god _Mars_," and he claimed
+for himself the designation or title "The Scourge of God"; while his
+followers were even more cruel and barbarous, if possible, than the
+Goths and the Vandals.
+
+Coming from the remote solitudes of Asia under the leadership of their
+fierce king, they poured like a tornado, first upon the inhabitants of
+the Eastern empire (in 442, 445) and then turned their attention
+westward. Attila ruled over "nearly all the tribes north of the Danube
+and the Black sea," and under his banner fought Ostrogoths, Gepidæ,
+Alani, Heruli, and many other Teutonic peoples. Says Gibbon: "The whole
+breadth of Europe, as it extends above five hundred miles from the
+Euxine to the Adriatic, was at once invaded, and occupied, and desolated
+by the myriads of barbarians whom Attila led into the field." It was the
+boast of Attila that the grass never grew on the spot which his horse
+had trod. In 451 he led his forces, seven hundred thousand strong,
+through the center of Germany into the heart of Gaul, where he was met
+at Chalons by the combined forces of the Visigoths, Alans, Franks and
+Romans, and was defeated, with the loss of one hundred and seventy
+thousand of his men. This was one of the most gigantic as well as one of
+the most important battles of history. A rivulet flowing through the
+field of battle is said to have been colored and swollen by the blood of
+the slain. The next year, however, with a greater force at his command,
+he fell with headlong fury upon northern Italy; but he did not attack
+Rome. Suddenly and seemingly without cause, he withdrew his army; and
+this peculiar action of his has been the wonder of historians ever
+since. Says the Encyclopædia Britannica: "Attila at once withdrew from
+Italy, but the motive which led him to act thus is not known." According
+to the prophecy, he was to fall upon the "rivers and fountains of
+waters" only. A short time later, in 453, he died, and "the vast empire
+over which he had ruled broke up _immediately_ after his death, no one
+chief being powerful enough to seize the supremacy." Thus his short but
+wonderful career of about twelve years ended suddenly, like a meteor
+falling into a river.
+
+But the effects of this invasion were farreaching. Rome in her declining
+strength, being unable to cope with these immense hordes of barbarians,
+was forced to call to her assistance the half-civilized tribes of Gothic
+barbarians against a more dreaded foe. The success that attended these
+conflicts of the combined forces were the means of giving greater
+political importance to these Gothic tribes and securing their
+independence. But while they rose, Rome fell. By the very act of
+employing such weapons in defense, Rome robbed herself of the little
+political strength remaining, and she was obliged to accept the bitter
+consequences.
+
+Under each of these first three trumpets the extent of destruction is
+indicated by the expression "the third part." Since the successive steps
+in the downfall of the empire is the subject under consideration, this
+expression as here applied doubtless has particular reference to the
+loss of political power and life, rather than referring directly to the
+loss of human life sustained. With this thought in view, it is evident
+that the political importance of the empire was entirely destroyed by
+these desolating incursions. Of the truth of this fact all historians
+agree. Nothing of Rome remained, except the semblance of a government,
+when the time arrived for the sounding of the next trumpet.
+
+ 12. And the fourth angel sounded, and the third part of the sun
+ was smitten, and the third part of the moon, and the third part
+ of the stars; so as the third part of them was darkened, and the
+ day shone not for a third part of it, and the night likewise.
+
+The symbol of this trumpet is that of an eclipse of sun, moon, and
+stars, so that they shone not for a third part of the day and night.
+Under the sixth seal we showed that these luminaries of heaven are taken
+as symbols of rulers and princes; for the latter bear an analagous
+relation to the empire that the former do to the earth. In the
+darkening, then, of the sun, moon, and stars, we are to look for some
+disastrous change or overthrow in the imperial government. Such an event
+occurred only a few years after the events described under the preceding
+trumpets. With her political strength and resources exhausted, Rome
+could no longer maintain a separate existence, and Odoacer, king of the
+Heruli, overthrew Momyllus Augustulus, the last of the Roman line of
+emperors, and caused himself to be proclaimed king of Italy in A.D. 476.
+This terminated the Western empire; and thus was the Roman sun eclipsed
+in darkness. In a subsequent chapter, however, we will find the eclipse
+lifted at a later period and _New Rome_ enjoying all the power and
+authority lost in her predecessors of the old Augustin line.
+
+Odoacer continued in possession of his kingdom seventeen years. Then he
+was defeated and slain by Theodoric, and by him the kingdom of the
+Ostrogoths was established in Italy. Sixty years later this kingdom was
+subverted by Belisarius, the general of Justinian, emperor of the East,
+to whom it became a tributary province. In each of the principal cities
+of Italy Justinian appointed a governor with the title of Duke, in
+subordination to another with the title of Exarch, whose residence was
+at Ravenna. "Thus, at last, was Rome, once the proud mistress of the
+world, reduced to a poor dukedom, made tributary to the Exarch of
+Ravenna, and he holding his authority at the will of the emperor of
+Constantinople, the seat of the Eastern empire."
+
+Thus, under the symbols of these four trumpets we have developed the
+wondrous history of the downfall of imperial Rome, in order to give
+opportunity for the scenes of the drama yet to follow. The "man of sin"
+could not be fully revealed in all his terrible features until this
+hindrance was removed out of the way. Imperial Rome for three centuries
+stood as the great opposer of God's people and slaughtered thousands,
+perhaps millions, of the Lord's innocent servants, and the hand of
+retributive Justice was finally extended to humble her to the dust.
+Singularly, the persons whom God made choice of to effect her downfall
+have either regarded themselves as special instruments whose mission it
+was to punish the world or else have received such designations by
+historians because of their awful work. Contemporary historians
+distinguish Alaric by the epithets "The Scourge of God," "The Destroyer
+of Nations"; while the great Vandal leader is designated "The Terrible
+Genseric." Attila claimed the title "The Scourge of God."
+
+ 13. And I beheld, and heard an angel flying through the midst of
+ heaven, saying with a loud voice, Woe, woe, woe, to the
+ inhabiters of the earth by reason of the other voices of the
+ trumpet of the three angels, which are yet to sound!
+
+The later editions of the Greek New Testament give the word _eagle_
+instead of _angel_--denoting a messenger or angel flying with the
+swiftness of an eagle. This messenger doubtless is not intended to be
+symbolic; for it is not one of the seven angels, but a messenger
+possessing a warning, and that warning is given "to the inhabitants of
+the earth," as if they were addressed directly. It simply announces that
+the three trumpets yet to sound will possess greater calamities to the
+people of earth than those that have preceded, by reason of which they
+are called woes. The manner, also, in which the woe trumpets are spoken
+of afterwards confirm the statement that the announcement is literal and
+not symbolical. "One woe is past, and, behold, there come two more woes
+hereafter." Chap. 9:12. "The second woe it past: and, behold, the third
+woe cometh quickly." Chap. 11:14. These announcements are evidently
+literal, and serve to explain the passage before us. Accordingly, the
+last three trumpets are generally referred to as the woe trumpets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+ And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven
+ unto the earth: and to him was given the key of the bottomless
+ pit.
+
+ 2. And he opened the bottomless pit; and there arose a smoke out
+ of the pit, as the smoke of a great furnace; and the sun and the
+ air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the pit.
+
+ 3. And there came out of the smoke locusts upon the earth: and
+ unto them was given power, as the scorpions of the earth have
+ power.
+
+ 4. And it was commanded them that they should not hurt the grass
+ of the earth, neither any green thing, neither any tree; but
+ only those men which have not the seal of God in their
+ foreheads.
+
+ 5. And to them it was given that they should not kill them, but
+ that they should be tormented five months: and their torment was
+ as the torment of a scorpion, when he striketh a man.
+
+ 6. And in those days shall men seek death, and shall not find
+ it; and shall desire to die, and death shall flee from them.
+
+ 7. And the shapes of the locusts were like unto horses prepared
+ unto battle; and on their heads were as it were crowns like
+ gold, and their faces were as the faces of men.
+
+ 8. And they had hair as the hair of women, and their teeth were
+ as the teeth of lions.
+
+ 9. And they had breastplates, as it were breastplates of iron;
+ and the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of
+ many horses running to battle.
+
+ 10. And they had tails like unto scorpions, and there were
+ stings in their tails: and their power was to hurt men five
+ months.
+
+ 11. And they had a king over them, which is the angel of the
+ bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but
+ in the Greek tongue hath his name Apollyon.
+
+The symbols of this trumpet are of a very peculiar character and
+peculiarly combined. They are not drawn entirely from the natural world,
+showing that we are not to look for their fulfilment in political events
+alone; neither are they drawn from human life in any such way as to
+indicate events in the religious history of the church. The leading
+characters in it, however, are living, active agents of such a
+destructive nature as to entitle them to the designation of a woe.
+
+The first object presented in the vision is a "star" fallen to the
+earth. Our translation conveys the idea that this star was in the act of
+falling; but in the original it is different, being there represented as
+having fallen, its dejection from heaven to earth being complete. The
+only place that it appeared in view was on the earth, and there it is
+described as fallen. A star is a symbol either of a civil ruler or of a
+religious teacher, the symbols in connection deciding whether it is set
+in the political or the ecclesiastical firmament. But this was not such
+a star as He who walketh in the midst of the golden candle-sticks
+holdeth in his right hand, but it was a _fallen_ star, indicating that
+it was the propagator of a false faith.
+
+To this star was given a key. In the Gospels the same figure is
+employed, where the ministers of Christ are represented as possessing
+the keys of the kingdom of heaven, showing that they acted in his name
+and by his authority. How appropriate, then, is this symbol as applied
+to a false teacher, who possesses, not the keys of the kingdom of
+heaven, but, instead, "the key of the bottomless pit"! Thus, under the
+symbol of the star and the key, we have the teacher and his authority
+set forth. Armed with this authority, this false teacher "opened the
+bottomless pit; and there rose a smoke out of the pit, as the smoke of a
+great furnace; and the sun and air were darkened by reason of the smoke
+of the pit." In the Scriptures Jesus is represented as the Sun of
+righteousness, while "the light of the _glorious gospel_ of Christ"
+illuminates the world. But here we have something of the opposite
+character--a dense smoke eclipsing the sun and darkening the heavens.
+Have we not here a fit representation of a delusive faith proceeding
+from its true source, "the bottomless pit"? And is not a fallen star an
+appropriate symbol of its propagator?
+
+In representing a system of religion by these objects from nature we
+depart from the general rule first laid down--that objects of nature
+symbolize political affairs, while the department of human and angelic
+life is chosen to represent religious affairs. But the reader should
+bear in mind one important exception to this rule--that things
+prominently connected with the history of the people of God in former
+ages are frequently employed (regardless of the department to which they
+belong) to represent spiritual things, their interpretation being easily
+seen; such as candle-sticks, altar, temple, incense, etc. When the
+plague of "thick darkness" covered the land of Egypt for three days,
+"the children of Israel had light in their dwellings." In the exodus the
+Lord went before them "by night in a pillar of fire, to give them
+light." After the erection of the tabernacle the holy place was
+constantly illuminated. This natural light in the Jewish age constitutes
+a beautiful type of the spiritual "light of the glorious gospel of
+Christ" that has "shined in our hearts" in the Christian dispensation.
+This spiritual light comes from Christ, the "Sun of righteousness," the
+"true Light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world"; and
+proceeds, also, from his people, who "shine as lights in the world." But
+it is the "light of the _gospel_." This light proceeds in a special
+sense from God's ministers, who are represented as "stars" (chap. 1:20)
+and who possess "the keys of the kingdom of heaven." Mat. 16:19; 18:18.
+How appropriate, then, that a _fallen_ "star," possessing "the key of
+the bottomless pit," should be a symbol of a religious impostor, and
+that the smoke which darkened the heavens, eclipsing the sun, the source
+of light, should represent a prominent delusive faith! I have already
+mentioned the fact that the symbols of this vision lead to a series of
+events entirely separate in their nature from the spiritual history of
+the church as developed under other symbols. We find its fulfilment in
+Mohammed and the delusive system he promulgated. In the year 606 Mahomet
+retired to a cave in Hera, near Mecca, and there received his pretended
+revelations, although it was not until six years later that he began to
+teach his doctrines publicly and to gain followers outside of the circle
+of his own family and personal friends. Gibbon, Vol. V., p. 121.
+
+The next object in the vision is the locusts that came out of the smoke,
+to which was given power like scorpions, or power to inflict a deadly
+sting like scorpions. To what living agents, then, did the delusion of
+Mohammedanism give birth--agents of a destructive nature like scorpion
+locust? Evidently, the Saracens,[6] those warrior followers of Mohammed
+who flocked to his standard. These locusts received the express command
+that "they should not hurt the grass of the earth, neither any green
+thing, neither any tree; but only those men which have not the seal of
+God in their foreheads." The successor of Mohammed, Abubeker, gave the
+Saracens a command that they should "destroy no palm-trees, nor burn any
+fields of grain; cut down no fruit-trees, nor do any mischief to cattle,
+only such as you kill to eat." This command was singular, yet it
+doubtless is not the fulfilment of the command to the locusts; for that
+would be adopting a literal meaning instead of a symbolic one, and to
+complete the picture we should have had literal Saracens instead of
+locusts. We can not consistently make a part literal and the remainder
+symbolical. In the explanation of the first trumpet (chap. 8:6, 7), we
+showed that grass and trees symbolized the inhabitants of a kingdom,
+grass representing the feebler and trees the stronger portions of
+society. The fact, then, that these locusts were not to destroy the
+green grass and trees show that they were not sent as a scourge upon the
+political empire only, as was the storm of hail and fire under the first
+trumpet. Had their mission been like that of natural locusts, to destroy
+every green thing, we should then conclude that they were sent as a
+scourge upon the empire alone, having nothing whatever to do with a
+system of religion. These locusts, however, were commanded not to do
+what natural locusts always do--eat green grass and trees--and were
+commissioned to do what locusts never do--"hurt men," but only those who
+have not the seal of God in their foreheads; that is, the worshipers of
+a false, idolatrous church, who are not known unto God as his true
+people. This is positive proof that the design of this vision is to set
+forth some awful religious imposture; for the "men" that they were to
+hurt are found in the department which by analogy represents religious
+events.
+
+[Footnote 6: "In earlier times the name of Saraceni was applied by
+Greeks and Romans to the troublesome Nomad Arabs of the Syro-Arabian
+desert."--_Encyclopædia Britannica_. In the Middle Ages, however,
+Europeans began to call all their Moslem enemies Saracens. It is in the
+limited sense that it is here applied, designating the first followers
+of Mohammed before the rise of the Ottoman empire.]
+
+The fact that their commission was to torment those "men which have not
+the seal of God in their foreheads," is a proof also of the wide-spread
+apostasies that had already taken place. This was the time when the pale
+horseman was careering over the world carrying desolation everywhere by
+his instruments of oppression--sword, pestilences, famine, and the wild
+beasts of the earth. "The churches both in the Western and Eastern
+empire were in the most deplorable condition, being corrupted with the
+grossest ignorance and idolatry; the virgin Mary, the saints, and
+miserable relics of every description being worshiped in the place of
+Jehovah, and superstition reigning with sovereign power over all minds."
+The Saracen warriors of Mohammed were sent as a scourge upon apostate
+Christendom, overrunning the very territory where the gospel was first
+preached, and were commissioned to "torment" the false professors of
+Christianity.
+
+In regard to the kind and the extent of the injury they were to inflict,
+it is said that "to them it was given that they should not kill them,
+but that they should be tormented five months: and their torment was as
+the torment of a scorpion, when he striketh a man. And in those days
+shall men seek death, and shall not find it; and shall desire to die,
+and death shall flee from them." The Saracens, as here described under
+the symbol of the locusts, sustained a two-fold relation, and the
+careful and perfect manner in which the symbols are selected to set it
+forth is worthy of particular notice. In the first place, the Saracens
+were a political body. As such, locusts would fitly represent them. But
+they were also a religious body, and how could that fact be symbolically
+combined with the other? It is done by the locusts' being forbidden to
+act out their own nature in eating grass and trees, and their being
+commanded instead to "hurt men," thus changing the field of their
+operations into the department of human life--the department that is
+chosen to symbolically set forth religious events. Thus the
+politico-religious system of the Saracens is accurately set forth. This,
+also, is nearly as clear as a demonstration that the position already
+taken concerning the nature and the use of symbolic language is correct.
+
+It was given that they should "not kill" men. We have already shown that
+killing men when used symbolically signifies the destruction of the
+political or ecclesiastical organizations and institutions of society.
+We could not consistently interpret it as literal slaughter, but as some
+analagous destruction. Now, the Saracen power was, as already stated, a
+politico-religious system, and its warriors were an infatuated set of
+religious fanatics, described by historians as "carrying the sword in
+one hand, and the Koran in the other." Thus, they had it in their power
+to kill either religiously or politically--destroy either the church or
+the empire--but they did neither, for their mission was not to kill, but
+to "torment." "They made extensive conquests and gained immense numbers
+of converts. But they did not overthrow the Eastern empire, although
+they repeatedly attacked and besieged Constantinople, suffering,
+however, uniform defeat in the attempt. Neither did they destroy the
+church, corrupt and apostate as it was. To idolators and infidels they
+put the alternative of the Koran or death; but allowed the Christians to
+retain their church organization, laying them, however, under severe
+contributions, and treating them to the ignominious appellation of
+Christian dogs." Concerning the character of Mohammed, Gibbon informs us
+that "he seldom trampled on a prostrate enemy, and he seems to promise,
+that on the payment of a tribute, the least guilty of his unbelieving
+subjects might be indulged in their worship, or at least in their
+imperfect faith" (Vol. V, p. 129), and this, of course, would be the
+natural tendency of his followers. The Armenian and the Greek churches
+survived, and still exist in that portion of the world, but they have
+indeed been greviously tormented. "The proud Moslem, glorying in his
+prophet and religion, has heaped every possible insult and injury upon
+the Christians," yet he suffered them to live, but live only for him to
+torment. Surely the oppressions thus experienced are appropriately
+described by the words, "as the torment of a scorpion, when he striketh
+a man." Under such torments the professed Christians might court death,
+but such is not granted; and still they survive, but only to be
+"tormented." The Moslem had "the Christian dog" completely under his
+foot.
+
+We now turn our attention to the period of time during which these
+Saracen locusts were to continue their ravages. It is given as "five
+months," or one hundred and fifty days. As this description is entirely
+symbolic, we must consider the time symbolic also, for time certainly
+can be symbolized as well as anything else. It is very appropriate for
+days to symbolize years, for they are analagous periods of time; the
+diurnal revolution of the earth being taken to represent the earth's
+annual movement. Such a system of reckoning time was known centuries
+ago. When Jacob complained to Laban because he had been given Leah
+instead of Rachel, "Laban said, It must not be so done in our country,
+to give the younger before the first-born. Fulfil her _week_, and we
+will give thee this also for the service which thou shalt serve me yet
+_seven other years_. And Jacob did so, and fulfilled her week ... seven
+other years." Gen. 29:26-30. In this case it will be seen that a day was
+used to represent a year, since seven days, or one week, represented
+seven years. When the law was given, Moses recognized the week of seven
+natural days, the last day of which was constituted a Sabbath of rest
+for Israel; but he also instituted a week of seven years, the last year
+of which was a sabbatical year of rest unto the land. This last fact
+will explain such expressions as "forty days, _each day for a year_"
+(Num. 14:34), and "I have appointed thee each day for a year." Ezek.
+4:6.
+
+This period, then, of "five months," or one hundred and fifty days,
+would represent symbolically one hundred and fifty years. As before
+stated, it was in the year A.D. 612 that Mohammed began to expound his
+doctrines publicly and to gather adherents around his standard, from
+which point the locusts commenced, although the smoke had been let out
+of the pit a little previously. For a period of one hundred and fifty
+years from this date, they continued their ravages, until A.D. 762. Then
+they "built Bagdad, which became their settled seat of empire; and
+henceforth they became a settled nation, making no further conquests."
+From that date their power began to decline. But during this one hundred
+and fifty years they spread over the country like swarms of devouring
+locusts. According to the well-known facts of history, "they overran
+Arabia, Palestine, Persia, Egypt, and the northern shores of Africa,
+from which they passed to the conquest of Portugal and Spain." These
+were the countries that had been the most oppressed by a priest-ridden
+church and where especially were to be found those "men which have not
+the seal of God in their foreheads." Europe was trembling and filled
+with apprehension at what her fate might be at the hands of these
+fanatic warriors who fought with savage fury, under the promise of their
+prophet that, if slain in battle, they should be immediately transported
+to Paradise. At the zenith of their power, and confident of success,
+they passed from Spain into France four hundred thousand strong. But
+here they exceeded their mission. The southern provinces of France
+contained many Christians who had the "seal of God" upon them, and this
+country became the seat of the Waldenses and Albigenses, of which
+interesting people we shall learn more hereafter. The invading host was
+met at Tours by Charles, grandfather of Charlemagne, who dealt them such
+a crushing blow that he was ever afterward designated by the surname
+Martel--the Hammer. This battle was one of the fiercest recorded in
+history. The Saracens who had scarcely ever experienced defeat fought
+with the fury of despair, until, according to the accounts of that age,
+three hundred and seventy-five thousand of their number lay upon the
+field of battle with their general. This decisive victory saved Europe
+from her threatened subjection to the Mohammedan faith.
+
+The next point in the vision to claim our attention is the particular
+description of these locusts. Some of the points mentioned might find a
+literal fulfilment in the personal appearance of the Saracens--such as
+the crowns signifying the turbans they wore, etc., but we must adhere
+strictly to the symbolic mode of interpretation and look for their
+fulfilment in Saracen character. Their being like war-horses denotes
+their warlike disposition. The crowns on their heads signify their great
+success and triumphs. Their faces of men and hair like women doubtless
+signify their boldness on the one hand and their effeminateness on the
+other. Their teeth as the teeth of lions show their ferocity of
+character. Their breastplates of iron indicate their invincibility or
+else their insensibility to injuries inflicted upon them. The sound of
+their wings like horses and chariots running to battle denotes the
+multitude and rapidity of their conquests. Their tails like scorpions,
+containing stings with which to "hurt men"--operating in the religious
+world--symbolize their position as propagators of a false faith. Thus
+they are set forth in their two-fold character--as invincible warriors
+and as the zealous professors of a delusion, whose sting was like that
+of a scorpion when he strikes a man.
+
+"And they had a king over them, which is the angel of the bottomless
+pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in the Greek tongue
+hath his name Apollyon." The following fact of history will explain
+this: "The Saracens had their Caliphs, the successors of Mohammed, who
+united in themselves the supreme civil, military and ecclesiastical
+powers. They were the high-priests of their religion, the commanders of
+their armies, and the emperors of the nation." This king over them
+signifies a succession of rulers, and they are well described as "the
+angel of the bottomless pit," for that is the very place where the
+delusion is said to have originated. Mahomet, as a fallen star, opened
+the pit and let out the smoke, and his successors, who grasped his power
+and authority, are fitly characterized as angels from the same place,
+bearing the name Abaddon or Apollyon, which terms both signify
+Destroyer.
+
+Is not this a wonderful combination of symbols which can be carried out
+with surprising accuracy? What human ingenuity could have ever contrived
+such a marvelous series of events, and described them under such
+appropriate symbols? Finally, let me ask, Where in the whole compass of
+universal history can be found another series of events so perfectly
+meeting every requirement of the symbols? In this we must acknowledge
+the hand of God.
+
+ 12. One woe is past; and, behold, there come two woes more
+ hereafter.
+
+This announcement, that one woe is past, meaning that the period of one
+hundred and fifty years during which the Saracens were to continue their
+conquests has ended, serves an important purpose in enabling us to fix
+the chronology of the events described. It proves that they succeed each
+other.
+
+ 13. And the sixth angel sounded, and I heard a voice from the
+ four horns of the golden altar which is before God,
+
+ 14. Saying to the sixth angel which had the trumpet, Loose the
+ four angels which are bound in the great river Euphrates.
+
+ 15. And the four angels were loosed, which were prepared for an
+ hour, and a day, and a month, and a year, for to slay the third
+ part of men.
+
+ 16. And the number of the army of the horsemen were two hundred
+ thousand thousand: and I heard the number of them.
+
+ 17. And thus I saw the horses in the vision, and them that sat
+ on them, having breastplates of fire, and of jacinth, and
+ brimstone: and the heads of the horses were as the heads of
+ lions; and out of their mouths issued fire and smoke and
+ brimstone.
+
+ 18. By these three was the third part of men killed, by the
+ fire, and by the smoke, and by the brimstone, which issued out
+ of their mouths.
+
+ 19. For their power is in their mouth, and in their tails: for
+ their tails were like unto serpents, and had heads, and with
+ them they do hurt.
+
+ 20. And the rest of the men which were not killed by these
+ plagues yet repented not of the works of their hands, that they
+ should not worship devils, and idols of gold, and silver, and
+ brass, and stone, and of wood: which neither can see, nor hear,
+ nor walk:
+
+ 21. Neither repented they of their murders, nor of their
+ sorceries, nor of their fornication, nor of their thefts.
+
+At the sounding of the sixth trumpet, or the second woe trumpet, a voice
+is heard from the four horns (all the horns) of the golden altar. This
+probably denotes that the very same altar where incense was offered up
+to God with the prayers of all saints was now crying out to him for
+vengeance upon an apostate church. That church had reached the summit of
+apostasy and iniquity, the virgin Mary, the saints, and thousands of
+idols in the form of miserable relics being worshiped more than God.
+Because of these abominable idolatries, a voice is heard crying from the
+golden altar for the avenging judgments of Heaven, which were the
+loosing of the four angels bound in the river Euphrates. The symbols of
+this vision are also of peculiar character and drawn from different
+departments. We have four angels bound in the Euphrates, an immense army
+of horsemen, then a large number of horses with heads as of lions, and
+fire, smoke, and brimstone issuing from their mouths. The horses thus
+particularly described are evidently intended to have a definite
+symbolical signification, and being objects of nature, they would
+indicate a political or military power. The horsemen, being objects from
+human life, would point us to some religious body; while the angels
+signify the leaders that have control of these agencies. Their being
+commissioned "to slay the third part of men" show that they will
+overthrow some of the established institutions of society. We are to
+look, therefore, for some politico-religious power that should invade
+and overthrow the empire. We are, of course, directed to the Eastern
+empire; for the Western division was subverted under the symbols of the
+first four trumpets. With these specifications before us, we shall have
+no difficulty in identifying the power intended--_the Turkish, or
+Ottoman, empire_. Its agreement with the symbolic representations of the
+vision will be manifest from a statement of the facts of history.
+
+"The Turks were of Tartar or Scythian origin, from the northern regions
+of Asia, whence also the Huns hived upon Europe during the fourth and
+fifth centuries. The latter passed to the north of the Black sea from
+Russia, and swept the regions of the Danube and the Rhine. The Turks,
+passing to the east of the same, fell upon the empire from that quarter.
+They took possession of Armenia Major in the ninth century, where they
+increased, and in the space of two hundred years became a formidable
+power, being at the end of this period combined into four Sultanies, the
+heads of which were at Bagdad, Damascus, Aleppo, and Iconium. The first
+of these was erected A.D. 1055; the two next A.D. 1079, and the last
+A.D. 1080--all of them within twenty-five years, and the three last
+within two."
+
+These four Sultanies are doubtless signified by "the four angels" that
+were bound in the river Euphrates. The Euphrates here is employed as a
+symbol, not of the Turks themselves--for the horsemen are their symbol,
+as we shall see--but of the binding of the angels. The use of this word
+as a symbol is derived from a fact of history, being the object,
+according to Herodotus, that kept Cyrus back from entering the city of
+Babylon. While the Persian monarch surrounded the walls of that ancient
+metropolis of the Babylonian empire, with his army, he was held in
+restraint by the river Euphrates; and it was not until he had diverted
+its waters into an artificial channel that he gained an entrance. So,
+also, these Sultanies, or leaders of the Turks, were held under
+restraint as if bound by the river Euphrates, until the time appointed
+for them to go forth on their mission of conquest. Different causes held
+them back. For a long time they were involved in fierce and almost
+continuous wars with the neighboring Tartar tribes on the east and the
+north, and at the same time the Crusaders of Europe were carrying on a
+determined war with the Saracens for the possession of the Holy Land.
+For two centuries the armies of Christendom poured into Syria and
+Palestine to recover from the hands of the "infidels," as they were
+called, the holy sepulchre and the country that gave birth to
+Christianity; but when Europe finally abandoned the project, then went
+forth the command to loose the four angels, "which were prepared for an
+hour, and a day, and a month, and a year, for to slay the third part of
+man." To kill men symbolically, I have already shown, signifies the
+destruction either of an empire as a political body or of the church
+(that is, the so-called church) as a religious body. The locusts under
+the fifth trumpet were to do neither; but the symbolic characters of
+this vision are "to slay the third part of men," by which is set forth
+the fall and subjugation of the Eastern empire and church; just as,
+under the fifth trumpet, the fall of the Western empire was described by
+the darkening of a third part of the sun, moon, and stars.
+
+Before considering the time-prophecy in this vision, we will pass on to
+notice a few particulars respecting the horses and their riders. The
+horsemen possessed breastplates of fire, jacinth, and brimstone; while
+out of the mouths of the horses proceeded fire, smoke, and brimstone.
+There is evidently a special design in distinguishing between the horses
+and their riders. These symbols, being drawn from different sources--the
+former from the natural world and the latter from human life--point out
+the two characteristics of the Turks as a politico-religious power. The
+symbolic description of the two is almost identical. The horsemen had
+breastplates of fire, jacinth (purplish or reddish blue), and brimstone.
+This describes the character of the Turks as a religious system. Out of
+the horses' mouths proceeded fire, smoke, and brimstone, which
+represents the Moslems as a political power. The only difference is that
+the smoke is substituted for the jacinth, but they very nearly agree in
+color. We are thus brought to the conclusion that the political and the
+religious power of the Turks is in harmony and agreement with each
+other--united in the closest manner possible, like a horse and its
+rider, and both animated by the same spirit. That spirit is perhaps
+their fierce, fanatical, aggressive, intolerant character.
+
+The tails of the horses were like serpents with heads, their power being
+in their mouth and in their tails--the one a lion, the other a serpent.
+It was by the fire, the smoke, and the brimstone that came from their
+lion-heads that the third part of men was killed, or their conquests
+were made; then with their serpent-like tails would they torment or
+"hurt" all those who would not adopt the Moslem faith, being in this
+respect like the scorpion locusts. Their lion-heads would denote their
+invincible strength and courage; and their serpent-tails, the tormenting
+sting inflicted upon those whom they subdued but who would not accept
+their religion. It is not said that the riders were the direct agents of
+destruction--not the Moslem faith as a religion--but it was the horses
+that accomplished the deadly work--the Ottomans as a political body.
+This was the power that extended conquests and established their empire,
+although it was accompanied by the religious system, working in perfect
+harmony.
+
+It is said that the "rest of the men which were not killed by these
+plagues" repented not. This expression doubtless signifies the Western,
+or Latin, church. They saw these judgments of the Euphratean horsemen on
+the Eastern empire, and the triumph of the Moslem sword and faith (the
+woe fell as a judgment upon the Eastern church); still, they continued
+as before in their abominable idolatries, by which is probably meant
+their worship of the virgin Mary, saints, relics, and images. There was
+no reformation. Error, superstition, and ecclesiastical usurpation
+prevailed as before.
+
+The Turks obtained their first victory over the Christians of the
+Eastern, or Greek, empire in A.D. 1281. Within ten years the Latins who
+inhabited Palestine were entirely overthrown (see Gibbon, Vol. VI, p.
+47), and the way was now clear for Turkish aggression against the Greek
+empire. Before the end of the century the four Sultanies mentioned were
+combined into one consolidated empire under Osman (corrupted by
+Europeans into Ottoman) and from him took the name which it still
+retains--the Ottoman empire. From the time they were let loose, the
+Turks continued their aggressions until A.D. 1453, when Constantinople
+fell before their victorious arms, and the Eastern empire, with the last
+of the Constantines, sunk to rise no more. "The Turkish sword and the
+religion of the Koran were enthroned in the Christian metropolis of the
+Roman emperors; and the proud Moslem had the Christian dog completely
+under his foot." The Ottoman power, however, continued to grow and make
+new conquests until the year A.D. 1672, when they conducted a successful
+campaign against Poland, in which forty-eight towns and villages were
+ceded to the Sultan, with promise of an annual tribute of two hundred
+and twenty thousand ducats. See Encyclopædia Britannica, Art. Turkey.
+This was the last victory they ever gained wherein the Ottoman empire
+obtained any advantage. A little later they marched against Vienna, but
+sustained a miserable defeat. "Venice and Russia now declared war
+against Turkey; misfortune followed misfortune; city after city was rent
+away from the empire; the Austrians were in possession of almost the
+whole of Hungary, the Italians of almost all the Morea." Encyclopædia
+Britannica, Art. Turkey. So the power of the Ottomans to extend their
+conquests and to add to their empire, ended with the victory over the
+Poles in A.D. 1672. This fact is even admitted by Demetrius Cantemir,
+prince of Moldavia, one of their historians, in the following language:
+"This was the _last_ victory by which any advantage accrued to the
+Othman state, or any city or province was annexed to the ancient bounds
+of the empire." In accordance with this statement, the same historian
+entitles the first part of his history up to the victory over the Poles
+in 1672 the History of _the Growth of the Othman Empire_, and the
+remaining portion, _The Decay of the Othman Empire_.
+
+Calculating now the time during which these horsemen were prepared to
+extend their conquests--"an hour, and a day, and a month, and a
+year"--we find according to prophetic, or symbolic, time--thirty days in
+a month, three hundred and sixty in a year--that it signifies three
+hundred and ninety-one years and fifteen days. This is exactly the
+period of time that elapsed between their first victory in A.D. 1281 and
+their last conquest in A.D. 1672. I can not verify the fifteen days,
+because no history at my command states the exact days of the month on
+which these victories occurred.
+
+One more point of importance must be considered before we conclude this
+chapter, and that is the continuance of the Ottoman power. The first, or
+Saracen, woe had power to torment men "five months," or one hundred and
+fifty years, during which time they continued their ravages. The second
+woe began when the command was given to loose the four angels, or the
+beginning of the Ottoman conquests. "An hour, and a day, and a month,
+and a year," or three hundred and ninety-one years, marked the time
+during which they were "prepared" to extend their conquests. But it is
+not stated that the woe itself, or the Ottoman power, would then cease;
+for it is not represented as ending until after the death and the
+resurrection of the witnesses (chap. 11:14), immediately following which
+the coming of Christ and the general judgment, or the third woe, is
+described. Verses 15-18. The Turkish power has made no advance for
+centuries, but has been on the decline; yet it will endure for its
+allotted time. It furnishes us a way-mark by which we can determine our
+position along the pathway of time; for when it falls, we may rest
+assured that the coming of Christ is imminent.
+
+For nearly two centuries it has been the wonder of civilized nations how
+that corrupt, tyrannical government, which has been described as a
+"despotism tempered by assassination," could exist in the increased
+light and onward advance of modern civilization. Concerning its position
+in Europe, Judson, in his recent history of Europe in the Nineteenth
+Century, says: "The Turkish empire has been an element of unrest in
+Europe. It has long been plain to all that it is not permanent. It has
+taken no root. The Turks are merely encamped in Europe; and it is merely
+a question of time when the last of them must return across the
+Bosphorus." Pp. 269, 270. But Turkey will continue to hold this
+territory of the old Greek empire until the time appointed by the Father
+for her overthrow. The nations of Europe have often conspired for her
+overthrow. This is what is known as the great Eastern Question, which
+has been described by one writer as "the expulsion of the Turk from
+Europe, and the scramble for his territory." But it has not yet been
+accomplished, for the very reason doubtless, that it _could not_ take
+place before the resurrection of the witnesses, of which we will speak
+later. Judson thus continues his account of the matter: "As soon as this
+idea was realized [that Turkish power in Europe must fall] by the
+Western nations, in place of the dread of the Turk which had so long
+been part and parcel of European thinking, the question of the disposal
+to be made of the Turkish possessions became matter of live interest.
+And this is the Eastern Question. The Greek empire vanished forever when
+the last Constantine fell in 1453. The only problem is one of partition.
+And the heart of it all is the disposal to be made of Constantinople.
+That imperial city is a site that, in strong hands, means power and
+wealth. What shall become of it? Russia early formed designs of
+conquest.... The empress Catherine ... had a grand scheme for a
+restoration of the Greek empire under a Russian prince. Alexander I., at
+Tilsit, planned a partition of the Ottoman empire with Napoleon, but the
+latter declined to see Constantinople in Russian hands.
+'Constantinople,' said he, 'is the empire of the world.' In 1844
+Nicholas visited England and made guarded suggestions to the
+prime-minister about the Turkish lands. The Ottoman empire, said he, was
+a sick man, nearly at the last extremity.... England declined to plan
+for a share of the inheritance, and nothing was done. In 1853 Nicholas
+resumed the subject with the British ambassador at St. Petersburg. The
+sick man, he now held, was at the point of death.... But again England
+declined and, indeed, the next year went to war with Russia to save the
+sick man from a premature end at the hands of the would-be administrator
+of the estate. Another power doubly interested in the future of the
+Turkish dominions is Austria. That empire has been the traditional enemy
+of the Turk, and at the end of the seventeenth century was the actual
+bulwark of Europe against Mohammedan conquest. When the tide of war
+rolled the other way, Austria was ready to share in the spoils. Twice
+near the end of the eighteenth century, was an alliance made between
+Russia and Austria for the partition of Turkey," etc. Pp. 270, 271.
+Thus, we find that these designs of nations for the overthrow of Turkey
+have so far been overruled; for God will not allow that power to come to
+"a _premature end_."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+ And I saw another mighty angel come down from heaven, clothed
+ with a cloud: and a rainbow was upon his head, and his face was
+ as it were the sun, and his feet as pillars of fire:
+
+ 2. And he had in his hand a little book open: and he set his
+ right foot upon the sea, and his left foot on the earth,
+
+ 3. And cried with a loud voice, as when a lion roareth: and when
+ he had cried, seven thunders uttered their voices.
+
+ 4. And when the seven thunders had uttered their voices, I was
+ about to write: and I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me,
+ Seal up those things which the seven thunders uttered, and write
+ them not.
+
+ 5. And the angel which I saw stand upon the sea and upon the
+ earth lifted up his hand to heaven,
+
+ 6. And sware by him that liveth for ever and ever, who created
+ heaven, and the things that therein are, and the earth, and the
+ things that therein are, and the sea, and the things which are
+ therein, that there should be time no longer:
+
+ 7. But in the days of the voice of the seventh angel, when he
+ shall begin to sound, the mystery of God should be finished, as
+ he hath declared to his servants the prophets.
+
+ 8. And the voice which I heard from heaven spake unto me again,
+ and said, Go and take the little book which is open in the hand
+ of the angel which standeth upon the sea and upon the earth.
+
+ 9. And I went unto the angel, and said unto him, Give me the
+ little book. And he said unto me, Take it, and eat it up; and it
+ shall make thy belly bitter, but it shall be in thy mouth sweet
+ as honey.
+
+ 10. And I took the little book out of the angel's hand, and ate
+ it up; and it was in my mouth sweet as honey: and as soon as I
+ had eaten it, my belly was bitter.
+
+ 11. And he said unto me, Thou must prophesy again before many
+ peoples, and nations, and tongues, and kings.
+
+In the preceding chapter we had a history of the two great woes that
+befell apostate Christendom. In this chapter we have in contrast a
+portion of the history of God's true church, to show us that all was not
+lost even though the Eastern church was greviously tormented by the
+serpent-tails of the horses and the Western church still continued as
+before in her sorceries, fornications, and abominable idolatries.
+
+The symbol is that of an angel from heaven. This is not the seventh, or
+the third woe angel, who ushers in the general judgment (chap.
+11:15-18), but it is a special messenger appearing on earth with the
+awful message that the end of time is near and that when the seventh
+angel soon begins to sound the mystery of God shall be finished and
+there shall be time no longer. This mighty angel is symbolical of some
+human agencies of distinguished character; for it stands in striking
+contrast with the destructive powers described under the preceding
+trumpets. When angels appear on the panoramic scene only in the temple
+above, they themselves are not symbolic characters, but only the
+conductors of the Revelation; but whenever they appear on earth, they
+represent distinguished agencies among men. In the present vision the
+symbol is drawn, not from the natural world, but from the heavenly, and
+the scene is laid upon earth; therefore we must look to the history of
+the church to find its fulfilment in some distinguished agencies
+appearing for the defence of Christ and his truth. The cloud, rainbow,
+face as the sun, and feet as pillars of fire, are doubtless intended to
+set forth their beautiful, benignant character, and to show that the
+angel is not such an one as those that were bound in the river
+Euphrates. This one has the bow of covenant promise upon his head, and
+his face shines as the sun.
+
+Where, then, in the history of God's true church do we find the agencies
+corresponding to the symbol? We find them in the _holy ministry_ that he
+has raised up and is now sending forth to preach the pure gospel and to
+declare the speedy sounding of the seventh trumpet and the coming of the
+Lord Jesus Christ to earth again.
+
+ "Lo, the angel now is standing on the sea and on the land;
+ How his voice the air is rending as to God he lifts his hand!
+ What an awful, awful message! Help us, Lord, this truth to see:
+ When the seventh trumpet thunders, then shall time no longer be.
+
+ "One more trumpet yet to summon us before the judgment seat,
+ Then the time of our frail planet will be said to be complete.
+ How the wicked will be wailing and the righteous overjoyed
+ When with fire the heav'ns are burning and the earth shall be destroyed!"
+
+This angel "set his right foot upon the sea, and his left foot on the
+earth," that his lion-like voice might be heard over all the world. This
+shows that the earth (the Apocalyptic earth--the territory of the Roman
+empire) was not the only place where the message was to be borne; it was
+to be sounded upon the sea, which would indicate its promulgation among
+all nations.
+
+When his mighty voice sounded, "seven thunders uttered their voices";
+and when about to record what they said, John was commanded to "seal up
+those things which the seven thunders uttered, and write them not." The
+fact that they were not to be recorded shows that they were to
+constitute no part of this Revelation. John evidently thought so at
+first; for they had the appearance of revelation, something clothed with
+divine authority, but they were not to be delivered to the church. What,
+then, were they? The most probable supposition is, that they were things
+that God for some reason did not choose to have revealed. Their sayings
+may have described events just prior to the end so perfectly as to leave
+the world in no doubt respecting the nearness of Christ's second coming;
+whereas it appears in the Scriptures that God has designed that it
+should be a matter of considerable uncertainty, especially to the
+unsaved. However, we can obtain no satisfactory explanation of the
+things uttered by the seven thunders; for we can not identify positively
+what John was commanded to "seal up."
+
+This angel had in his hand a little book that John was required to take
+and eat. In advancing and taking the book, John himself becomes an actor
+in the symbolic scene, the same as was the book and the angel from whose
+hand he took it. Therefore we must now consider John a symbol of
+something in this vision. Some of the commentators have supposed that
+this book signified the remainder of the book of Revelation. But John
+was commanded to _write_ the Revelations, not to _eat_ them. And if he
+ate them, how, then, could they constitute the remainder of the book?
+Its true signification is undoubtedly the word of God. In making such an
+application we do not necessarily make one book merely a symbol of a
+larger one, as the Bible is, but of God's _revealed will_, just the same
+as the sealed book of chapter V was the symbol of the divine purposes.
+When we come to explain the resurrection of the witnesses in chapter XI,
+it will be found that this is the time when the word of God is again
+taught in all its purity, being restored for the first time, in its
+perfect sense, since the morning time of this dispensation. A great
+spiritual famine has for centuries overspread the earth. Since the time
+the black horse of the third seal entered on his career, the people have
+been starving for spiritual food. The few crumbs that have been dropped
+during the reign of Protestantism have been eagerly gathered up by the
+spiritually-minded; but, thank God! the time has now arrived when the
+messengers appear with food from heaven, and the multitudes of earth's
+starving millions can "eat in plenty, and be satisfied, and praise the
+name of the Lord God." Joel 2:26. Halleluiah!
+
+In taking the book from the hand of the angel and eating it, John became
+a symbol of the church, or people of God, who receive the Word from the
+hand of his ministers. The sweetness of its taste signifies the
+eagerness with which people receive it and the gladness experienced when
+they first partake of the heavenly manna; while the bitterness resulting
+therefrom probably symbolizes the bitter persecutions and oppositions of
+which it is the occasion. "Yea, and _all_ that will live godly in Christ
+Jesus shall suffer persecution." 2 Tim. 3:12.
+
+John was told to "prophesy again before many peoples, and nations, and
+tongues, and kings," which signifies that the people of God must again
+be witnesses of his saving grace throughout all the world. In the
+beginning of this dispensation all his people prophesied among the
+nations; for Christ had said unto them, "Ye shall be _witnesses_ unto
+me, both in Jerusalem, and in Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the
+uttermost parts of the earth." Acts 1:8. So, also, in this evening time
+we go forth again on the same mission, inspired by the soon-coming of
+our Savior.
+
+"Even so come, Lord Jesus."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+ And there was given me a reed like unto a rod: and the angel
+ stood, saying, Rise, and measure the temple of God, and the
+ altar, and them that worship therein.
+
+ 2. But the court which is without the temple leave out, and
+ measure it not; for it is given unto the Gentiles: and the holy
+ city shall they tread under foot forty and two months.
+
+ 3. And I will give power unto my two witnesses, and they shall
+ prophesy a thousand two hundred and threescore days, clothed in
+ sackcloth.
+
+ 4. These are the two olive-trees, and the two candlesticks
+ standing before the God of the earth.
+
+ 5. And if any man will hurt them, fire proceedeth out of their
+ mouth, and devoureth their enemies: and if any man will hurt
+ them, he must in this manner be killed.
+
+ 6. These have power to shut heaven, that it rain not in the days
+ of their prophecy: and have power over waters to turn them to
+ blood, and to smite the earth with all plagues, as often as they
+ will.
+
+The two principal objects of this vision is the city of Jerusalem with
+its holy temple and worshipers, and two witnesses prophesying for twelve
+hundred and sixty days. These are not objects from the natural world;
+therefore we may conclude that we have not here to do with political
+events, while the character of the symbols point us with certainty to
+the history of the church.
+
+There is a possibility that the speaker here is not the angel of the
+preceding chapter; for the words in verse 1 "and the angel stood" may be
+an interpolation, they being found in very few manuscripts. See the
+Revised Version and the Emphatic Diaglott, Greek and English. If not,
+then he must be the angel through whom the Revelation was given. Chap.
+1:1; 22:8. Whether the angel is the same as the one in the preceding
+chapter or not, it is evident that that series of prophecy ends with
+chapter 10, and that he here introduces a new line of events running
+over the entire gospel dispensation[7], in which John as an active agent
+in the panoramic vision still stands as a symbol of the people of God,
+who, in striking contrast with the blind devotees of an apostate church,
+are commanded to "measure the temple of God, and the altar, and them
+that worship therein." The temple with its altar and court and the holy
+city itself, here used as symbols, are representative of something
+analagous, and refer to no other than the outward, visible church of God
+with its doctrines and worshipers. Its measurement is designed to show
+how far it conforms to the true church; while the rod is a symbol of the
+revealed will of God, by which the measurement is brought as to a true
+standard.
+
+[Footnote 7: This statement may seem to conflict with the classification
+of events in the "Diagram of the Revelation," where this prophecy is
+treated, not as an independent series, but as part of a compound series
+beginning with chapter 8 and ending with chapter 11. For thus
+classifying it my reason is, that the line of prophecy beginning with
+chapter 8 introduces the seven trumpets, and therefore the series is not
+complete until the seventh trumpet is given, which event concludes the
+line of truth given in the present chapter.]
+
+By noticing briefly the arrangement of the temple and the purposes to
+which the different apartments were put, we shall be able to understand
+better the design of this vision. The temple proper consisted of two
+apartments. In the first stood the altar of incense and other things; in
+the second, the ark of the covenant, etc. The priests officiated in the
+first apartment regularly, while into the second went the high-priest
+alone once every year. This, Paul informs us, was a shadow of a greater
+and more perfect tabernacle. Heb. 9:1-11; 8:2. The altar that is
+mentioned and that John was to measure is a symbol of the great cardinal
+doctrine of the church--the atonement and mediation of Christ. He was
+the sacrifice made for sin, through whom we have redemption and access
+unto God. John was also told to measure those who worshiped therein--the
+officiating ministers in the sanctuary--who were thus made symbols of
+the ministers and the teachers in the church. To measure the temple of
+God, then, was to ascertain the great doctrines taught in the Scriptures
+and symbolized by the sanctuary, the altar, and the priests; namely, the
+doctrines of the New Testament concerning God as the supreme lawgiver,
+the atonement of Jesus Christ as the only ground for justification, and
+the ministers whom he appointed to officiate in his church.
+
+These are the great principles corrupted by the Papacy. Instead of the
+one supreme God, we find another in the temple of God, "showing himself
+that _he_ is God." Christ was not recognized as the supreme and only
+head of the church; but instead the Pope claimed the title of universal
+head and legislated supreme, while his decrees and anathemas were
+accepted as from Jehovah himself. Christ was not regarded as the only
+mediator between God and man, but the virgin Mary and the saints were
+exalted to share the mediatorial throne, the mother being more honored
+than the Son. Penance, counting of beads, works of supererogation, were
+believed to be more effectual in obtaining forgiveness of sin than
+living faith in our only Redeemer. Finally, in place of the humble
+ministers of Christ whom he appointed to officiate in his church, there
+were haughty lords and rulers, making the most extravagant claims to
+power and authority over the minds and consciences of men. The court of
+the temple was the space outside of the sanctuary occupied by the
+congregation while the worship within was conducted by the priests. John
+was told to leave this out and measure it not; for it was given to the
+Gentiles to tread under foot, or profane, for the space of forty and two
+months, or twelve hundred and sixty days. In the estimation of a Jew,
+the Gentiles were all idolaters and outside of God's covenant favor. As
+a symbol, then, we are to understand that the great body of worshipers
+thus brought to view are not the true children of God at all, but are,
+as it were, uncircumcised, idolatrous Gentiles, having no connection
+whatever with the great head of the church and no part in the covenant
+of his mercy. The whole city of Jerusalem was to be given over to this
+profane multitude and by them desecrated for forty-two months, denoting
+that this great company of worshipers was to constitute the visible,
+external church during the period specified. It is as though the city of
+Jerusalem were occupied by the idolatrous heathen, and the Jews driven
+out as aliens. These Gentiles, then, were to constitute the one great
+(so-called) universal church--the Church of Rome.
+
+Forty and two months, or twelve hundred and sixty days, are symbolic
+time, signifying twelve hundred and sixty years, during which time the
+power of apostasy was to reign supreme over the minds of men. The same
+period is also referred to frequently in subsequent chapters. It is
+necessary, then, for us to ascertain at what period of time the church
+was given over to a profane multitude that was not the true people of
+God. Some have supposed that this must refer to the time when Popery
+became fully established. Such, however, could not be the case (although
+the time-period includes that important event); for the power of
+apostasy was greatly developed centuries before the final supremacy of
+the Popes was established, and was necessary in order to prepare the way
+for their exaltation. The Popes obtained their authority by degrees. In
+A.D. 606 the emperor Phocas conferred the title "Universal Bishop" upon
+the Pope of Rome. In A.D. 756 the Pope became a temporal sovereign. Yet
+the power of Papal usurpation did not reach the summit until the reign
+of the impious Hildebrand, who succeeded to the Popedom in A.D. 1073,
+under the title of Gregory VII. But according to the symbols before us,
+we must look for a period not so much when the Popes were enabled to
+definitely enforce their arrogant claims, as when the ministry became
+corrupted and when the inhabitants of the city, or the devotees of the
+visible church, became a profane multitude entirely estranged from the
+covenant of promise. The usurpations of the ministry that accompanied
+this great change in the external church have been considered already
+under the symbols of chapter VI. This mighty transformation to a church
+containing nothing but uncircumcised Gentiles was fully accomplished
+during the latter half of the third century, from which date we must
+look for the true disciples of the Lord as entirely separate from the
+hierarchy. A few quotations from standard and ecclesiastical histories
+will show this important epoch in the rise of the Papacy that plunged
+the world into almost universal apostasy.
+
+"The living church retiring gradually within the lonely sanctuary of a
+few solitary hearts, an external church was substituted in its place,
+and all its forms were declared to be of divine appointment. Salvation
+no longer flowing from the Word, which was henceforward put out of
+sight, the priests affirmed that it was conveyed by means of the forms
+they had themselves invented, and that no one could obtain it but by
+these channels.... The doctrine of the church and the necessity of its
+visible unity, which had begun to gain ground in the _third century_,
+favored the pretensions of Rome." D'Aubigne's History of the
+Reformation, Book I, Chap. 1.
+
+"At the end of the third century almost half the inhabitants of the
+Roman empire, and of several neighboring countries, professed the faith
+of Christ. About this time endeavors to preserve a unity of belief, and
+of church discipline, occasioned numberless disputes among those of
+different opinions, and led to the establishment of an ecclesiastical
+tyranny." Encyclopædia of Religious Knowledge.
+
+Concerning the Roman diocese, the Encyclopædia Britannica says, "Before
+the termination of the third century the office was held to be of such
+importance that its succession was a matter of interest to ecclesiastics
+living in distant sees." Vol. XIX, p. 488.
+
+"Almost proportionate with the extension of Christianity was the
+decrease in the church of vital piety. A philosophizing spirit among the
+higher, and a wild monkish superstition among the lower orders, fast
+took the place in the third century of the faith and humility of the
+first Christians. Many of the clergy became very corrupt, and
+excessively ambitious. In consequence of this there was an awful
+defection of Christianity." Marsh's Church History, p. 185.
+
+"We have found it almost necessary to separate, and indeed widely to
+distinguish the events of the two first, from those of the third
+century, for nearly at this point we are disposed to place the FIRST
+CRISIS in the internal history of the church." Waddington's Church
+History.
+
+"This season of external prosperity was improved by the ministers of the
+church for the exertion of new claims, and the assumption of powers with
+which they had not been previously invested. At first these claims were
+modestly urged, and gradually allowed; but they laid a foundation for
+the encroachments which were afterwards made upon the rights of the
+whole Christian community, and for lofty pretensions to the right of
+supremacy and spiritual dominion.... Several alterations in the form of
+church government appear to have been introduced during the third
+century. Some degree of pomp was thought necessary.... The external
+dignity of the ministers of religion was accompanied by a still greater
+change in its discipline.... Many of the Jewish and Pagan proselytes ...
+languished in the absence of ceremonies which were naturally adapted to
+the taste of the unreflecting multitude, while the insolent infidel
+haughtily insisted upon the inanity of a religion which was not
+manifested by an external symbol or decoration. In order to accommodate
+Christianity to these prejudices, a number of rites were instituted; and
+while the dignified titles of the Jewish priesthood were through a
+compliance with the prejudices of that people, conferred upon the
+Christian teachers, many ceremonies were introduced which coincided with
+the genius of Paganism. The true gospels were taught by sensible images,
+and many of the ceremonies employed in celebrating the heathen mysteries
+were observed in the institutions of Christ, which soon in their turn
+obtained the name of mysteries, and served as a melancholy precedent for
+future innovations, and as a foundation for that structure of absurdity
+and superstition which deformed and disgraced the church." Rutter's
+History of the Church, pp. 52-56.
+
+This "season of external prosperity" mentioned by Rutter began with the
+accession of Gallienus to the imperial throne in A.D. 260. Up to this
+time the hand of persecution had been raised against the church almost
+incessantly; but from 260 until the reign of Diocletian persecution
+almost ceased, during this space of about forty years. But this period
+also marked the greatest decline in spiritual things and a marvelous
+development of the hierarchy. Speaking of the bishop of Rome in these
+times, Dowling says, "He far surpassed all his brethren in the
+magnificence and splendor of the church over which he presided; in the
+riches of his revenues and possessions; in the number and variety of his
+ministers; in his credit with the people; and in his sumptuous and
+splendid manner of living." History of Romanism, p. 34.
+
+Ammianus Marcellinus, a Roman historian, who lived during these times,
+adverting to this subject, says: "It was no wonder to see those who were
+ambitious of human greatness, contending with so much heat and animosity
+for that dignity, because when they had obtained it, they were sure to
+be enriched by the offerings of the matrons, and of appearing abroad in
+great splendor, of being admired for their costly coaches, and sumptuous
+feasts, outdoing sovereign princes in the expenses of their table." This
+led Proetextatus, a heathen, who was præfect of the city, to say, "Make
+me bishop of Rome, and I'll be a Christian too!"
+
+Speaking of the period now under consideration, Eusebius, "the father of
+church history," "mentions one Paul, who was at this time bishop of
+Antioch; who lived in luxury and licentiousness, and who was a teacher
+of erroneous doctrines, and usurped so great authority that the people
+feared to venture to accuse him. In the conclusion of the same chapter
+in which this is found, he shows that after a general council was held
+at Antioch, this Paul was excommunicated and robbed of his bishopric by
+the bishops of Rome and Italy; from this it appears that they possessed
+an authority still greater than that usurped by Paul." The following are
+his words: "Paul, therefore, having thus fallen from the episcopate,
+together with the true faith as already said, Domnus succeeded in
+administration of the church at Antioch. But Paul being unwilling to
+leave the building of the church, an appeal was made to the emperor
+Aurelian, who decided most equitably on the business, ordering the
+building to be given up to those whom the Christian bishops of Italy and
+Rome should write." Eccl. History, Book VII, Chap. 30. The Encyclopædia
+Britannica says that this council at which Paul was excommunicated was
+held "probably in the year 268," and that "Paul continued in his office
+until the year 272, when the city was taken by the emperor Aurelian, who
+decided in person that the church-building belonged to the bishop who
+was in epistolary communication with the bishops of Rome and Italy."
+Vol. XVIII, p. 429.
+
+The above extracts show not only the development of error in the church,
+but also the great power already obtained by the hierarchy. Geo. Fisher
+says, "The accession of Constantine [A.D. 312] found the church so
+firmly organized under the hierarchy that it could not lose its identity
+by being absolutely merged in the state." History of the Christian
+Church, p. 99.
+
+In the year A.D. 270 Anthony, an Egyptian, the founder of the monastic
+institution, fixed his abode in the deserts of Egypt and formed monks
+into organized bodies. "Influenced by these eminent examples [Anthony,
+Hilarion, et al.] immense multitudes betook themselves to the desert,
+and innumerable monasteries were fixed in Egypt, Ethiopia, Lybia and
+Syria. Some of the Egyptian abbots are spoken of as having had five,
+seven, or even ten thousand monks under their personal direction; and
+the Thebias, as well as certain spots in Arabia, are reported to have
+been literally crowded with solitaries. Nearly a hundred thousand of all
+classes, it is said, were at one time to be found in Egypt.... Although
+the enthusiasm might be at a lower ebb in one country than in another,
+it _actually affected the church universal_, so far as the extant
+materials of ecclesiastical history enables us to trace its rise and
+progress.... The more rigid and heroic of the Christian anchorets
+dispensed with all clothing except a rug, or a few palm leaves round the
+loins. Most of them abstained from the use of water for ablution; nor
+did they usually wash or change the garments they had once put on; thus
+_St. Anthony_ [the founder of this order] bequeathed to Athanasius a
+skin in which his sacred person had been wrapped for half a century.
+They also allowed their beards and nails to grow, and sometimes became
+so hirsute, as to be actually mistaken for hyænas or bears." Hist. of
+Romanism, pp. 88, 89. Reader, what was the condition of the so-called
+church in A.D. 270 that could make the introduction of such abominations
+possible? Although many more historical quotations on this point might
+be added, I will conclude with the two following extracts from Joseph
+Milner.
+
+"We shall, for the present, leave Anthony propagating the monastic
+dispositions, and extending its influence not only into the next
+century, but for many ages after, and conclude this view of the state of
+the _third century_, with expressing our regret that the faith and love
+of the gospel received toward the close of it a dreadful blow from the
+encouragement of this unchristian practise." Cen. III, Chap. 20.
+
+"Moral, and philosophical, and monastic instructions will not effect for
+men what is to be expected from evangelical doctrine. And if the faith
+of Christ was so much declined (and its decayed state _ought to be dated
+from about the year 270_), we need not wonder that such scenes as
+Eusebius hints at without any circumstantial details took place in the
+Christian world." Cent. IV, Chap. 1.
+
+After reading the foregoing statements of historians, the reader will, I
+believe, agree with me that the year 270 is a consistent date to mark
+the time when the visible external church was wholly given over to the
+profane multitude of uncircumcised, idolatrous Gentiles to tread under
+foot. Measuring forward the allotted period of twelve hundred and sixty
+years brings us to the exact date of the first Protestant creed (_the
+Augsburg Confession_) in A.D. 1530. We must point to this date both for
+the end of Rome's universal spiritual supremacy and for the rise of
+Protestantism. D'Aubigne, in his History of the Reformation, when he
+comes to this period, says: "The conflicts hitherto described have been
+only partial; we are entering upon a new period, that of general
+battles. Spires (1529) and Ausburg (1530) are names that shine forth
+with more immortal glory than Marathon, Pavia, or Marengo. Forces that
+up to the present time were separate, are now uniting into one energetic
+band." Book XVIII, Chap. 1. "The first two books of this volume contain
+the most important epochs of the reformation--the Protest of Spires, and
+the Confession of Augsburg.... I determined on bringing the reformation
+of Germany and German Switzerland to the _decisive epochs_ of 1530 and
+1531. The history of the reformation, properly so called, is then in my
+opinion almost complete in those countries. The work of faith has there
+attained its apogee: that of conferences, of interims, of diplomacy
+begins.... The movement of the sixteenth century has there made its
+effort. I said from the very first, It is the history of the reformation
+and not of Protestantism that I am relating." D'Aubigne, Preface to Vol.
+V.
+
+The next important object in the vision is the "two witnesses" that
+prophecied in sackcloth. From the description given, it would appear at
+first that these witnesses were active intelligent agents; and as such,
+belonging to the department of human life, they would symbolize the
+church, the number two denoting the ministry and the people of God. But
+the church is already symbolized in this chapter, the angel representing
+the ministry, as in the preceding chapter, and John, who is clearly one
+of the symbolic agents in this vision, representing the church;
+therefore the two witnesses must be representative of something else.
+Since the actions ascribed to them are drawn from the department of
+human life, it is evident that their interpretation is to be found in
+connection with the affairs of the church. By way of explanation, verse
+4 represents them to be "the two olive-trees, and the two candle-sticks
+standing before the God of the earth," although it is not stated that
+any olive-trees and candle-sticks were shown in this prophetic vision.
+In this reference is made to the fourth chapter of Zechariah, where two
+olive-trees are represented as standing one on each side of a golden
+candle-stick, distilling into it their oil for light. When asked for the
+signification of the two olive-trees and the candlestick, the angel
+answered, "This is the _Word_ of the Lord ... by my _Spirit_, saith the
+Lord." Ver. 6. That the Word of God and the Spirit of God are special
+witnesses is proved by many texts. Jesus said, "Search the Scriptures
+... they are they which _testify_ of me." John 6:39. "This gospel of the
+kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a _witness_ unto all
+nations." Mat. 24:14. "The Holy Ghost also is a _witness_." Heb. 10:15.
+"The Spirit itself beareth _witness_." Rom. 8:16. "It is the Spirit that
+beareth _witness_." 1 John 5:6. It is the Spirit acting in conjunction
+with the Word of God that gives spiritual life, through regeneration,
+unto men, and which opens their understanding that they may know the
+things of God. 2 Cor. 2:9-15.
+
+God may have given us the explanation that these two witnesses were the
+same as the olive-trees and the candle-sticks to prevent our being led
+astray with the supposition that they were actually intelligent agents.
+(I speak humanly.) Accepting this statement, the actions of these
+witnesses here described can be explained only by the figure of speech
+known as Personification, by which it is proper, under certain
+conditions, to attribute life, action, and intelligence to inanimate
+objects. Thus, the blood of Abel is said to have cried from the ground.
+Gen. 4:9, 10. "The stone shall cry out of the wall, and the beam out of
+the timber shall answer it." Hab. 2:11. "The hire of the laborers ...
+which is of you kept back by fraud crieth: and the cries ... are entered
+into the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth." Jas. 5:4. "The mountains and the
+hills shall break forth before you into singing, and all the trees of
+the field shall clap their hands." Isa. 55:12. I would not attempt to
+vary from the general order and explain these two witnesses by the
+figure of personification, were it not for the fact that the two
+olive-trees and the two candle-sticks are here given as a means of
+explanation; and trees and candle-sticks, we know, are not active,
+intelligent agents, and consequently do not necessarily symbolize such.
+
+To "hurt" the Word and Spirit of God is to oppose, corrupt, or pervert
+their testimony and to turn people away from them; and the judgments of
+Heaven are pronounced in that Word and by that Spirit against such as
+turn away from the truth unto fables. They shall have their part in the
+lake that burns with fire and brimstone. Rev. 20:15; 22:8. It is also
+said of them: "These have power to shut heaven, that it rain not in the
+days of their prophecy: and have power over waters to turn them to
+blood, and to smite the earth with all plagues, as often as they will."
+This indicates the fact that these were God's own special witnesses sent
+in his name and by his authority, as were the prophets of old. Elijah
+shut up heaven by prayer; Moses called down the plagues upon Egypt; and
+these were God's attestations that they were his divinely commissioned
+servants. So these two witnesses had power to shut heaven and to smite
+the earth with plagues, not literally, but herein is symbolically set
+forth the fact that they were God's appointed agents, even though
+despised and rejected, like Elijah in the midst of apostate Israel and
+Moses amid idolatrous Egypt, yet, like them, with the seal of Heaven
+upon their ministry.
+
+In the beginning of this dispensation these two witnesses were the
+vicars of Christ in his church upon earth. The word of God and the
+Spirit of God were the Governors of his people. At that time they had
+perfect freedom of action among the children of God; but when the
+apostasy arose, the governing power of the Word and Spirit of God in the
+church was gradually usurped by the rising hierarchy, until, finally,
+men had entire authority in what was called the visible church. This was
+brought about when, to quote Mosheim's words, the bishops grasped the
+power and authority "to prescribe authoritative rules of faith and
+manners." D'Aubigne explains it thus: "Salvation no longer flowing from
+the _Word_, which was henceforward put out of sight, the priests
+affirmed that it was conveyed by means of the forms they had themselves
+invented, and that no one could attain it except by these channels....
+Christ communicated to the apostles, and these to the bishops, the
+unction of the _Holy Spirit_; and this Spirit is to be procured only in
+that order of succession.... Faith in the heart no longer connected the
+members of the church, and they were united by means of bishops,
+archbishops, popes, mitres, canons and ceremonies." History of the
+Reformation, Book I, Chap. 1. Thus, the Word and Spirit of God as the
+true vicars of Christ in his church were finally expelled from what was
+looked upon as the one visible church, and with them the true worshipers
+also were driven out; and nothing remained in the public view except the
+great company of profane idolaters already referred to. The same is
+referred to in a subsequent chapter as the flight of the true church
+into the wilderness, where, hidden from sight, she had a place prepared
+of God for twelve hundred and sixty days. So after all, God had a true
+church during the Dark Ages--a people that stood in opposition to the
+abounding corruption and iniquity of the church of Rome; a people that
+rejected the established hierarchy and gave heed to the Word and Spirit
+of God. But their numbers were so few, comparatively, that the
+operations of the two witnesses were greatly limited; hence they are
+represented as being clothed in sackcloth, a symbol of melancholy and
+mourning.
+
+Among those who opposed the teachings of that apostate church were the
+Cathari, Poor Men of Lyons, Lombards, Albigenses, Waldenses, Vaudois,
+etc. The name Waldenses and Albigenses have frequently been loosely
+applied to all the bands of people that passed under various titles in
+different countries and that opposed the doctrines and ecclesiastical
+tyranny of Rome. Speaking of the twelfth century, Bowling says: "There
+existed at that dark period, when 'all the world wondered after the
+beast,' a numerous body of the disciples of Christ, who took the New
+Testament for their guidance and direction in all the affairs of
+religion, rejecting the doctrines and commandments of men. Their appeal
+was from the decisions of councils, and the authority of popes,
+cardinals, and prelates, to the law and the testimony--the words of
+Christ and his holy apostles." History of Romanism, p. 272. Egbert, a
+monkish writer of that age, speaking of them, says that he had often
+disputed with these heretics, "a sort of people," he adds, "who are very
+pernicious to the Catholic faith, which, like moths, they corrupt and
+destroy. They are armed," says he, "_with the words of Scripture_ which
+in any way seem to favor their sentiments, and with these they know how
+to defend their errors, and to oppose the Catholic truth. They are
+increased to great multitudes throughout all countries, to the great
+danger of the church [of Rome]."
+
+For lack of space, an extensive history of these interesting people can
+not be given; but a few references to them by their most inveterate
+enemies, the Papists themselves, are of such importance that I can not
+pass them by unnoticed. The testimony given by Evervinus, a zealous
+Catholic, in a letter he wrote to the celebrated Bernard, at the
+beginning of the twelfth century, relative to the doctrine and manners
+of these so-called _heretics_, is exceedingly valuable. Says he: "There
+have lately been some heretics discovered among us, near Colonge [sic:
+Cologne], of whom some have, with satisfaction returned again to the
+church. One that was a bishop among them, and his companions, openly
+opposed us, in the assembly of the clergy and laity, the lord-archbishop
+himself being present, with many of the nobility, maintaining their
+heresy from _the words of Christ and his apostles_. But, finding that
+they made no impression, they desired that a day might be fixed, upon
+which they might bring along with them men skilful in their faith,
+promising to return to the church, provided their teachers were unable
+to answer their opponents; but that otherwise, they would rather die
+than depart from their judgment.
+
+"Upon this declaration, having been admonished to repent, and three days
+allowed them for that purpose, they were seized by the people, in their
+excess of zeal, _and committed to the flames_! and, what is most
+astonishing, they came to the stake and endured the torment not only
+with patience, but even with joy. In this case, O holy father, were I
+present with you, I should be glad to ask you, how these members of
+Satan could persist in their heresy with such constancy and courage as
+is rarely to be found among the most religious in the faith of Christ?"
+
+He then proceeds: "Their heresy is this: They say that the church (of
+Christ) is only among themselves, because they alone follow the ways of
+Christ, and imitate the apostles, not seeking secular gains.... Whereas
+they say to us, 'Ye join house to house, and field to field, seeking the
+things of this world.'... They represent themselves as the poor of
+Christ's flock, who have no certain abode, fleeing from one city to
+another, like sheep in the midst of wolves, enduring persecution with
+the apostles and martyrs: though strict in their manner of
+life--_abstemious, laborious, devoted, and holy_ ... living as men who
+are not of the world. But you, say they, lovers of the world, have peace
+with the world, because ye are in it. False apostles, who adulterate the
+word of God, seeking their own things, have misled you and your
+ancestors. Whereas, we and our fathers, having been born and brought up
+in the apostolic doctrine, have continued in the grace of Christ, and
+shall continue so to the end.... They affirm that the apostolic dignity
+is corrupted by indulging itself in secular affairs, while it sits
+[professedly] in St Peter's chair. They do not hold with the baptism of
+infants, alleging that passage of the gospel, 'He that believeth and is
+baptized shall be saved.' They place no confidence in the intercession
+of saints and all things observed in the church, which have not been
+established by Christ himself, or his apostles, they pronounce to be
+superstitious. They do not admit of any purgatory fire after death,
+contending, that the souls of men, as soon as they depart out of the
+bodies, do enter into rest or punishment ... by which means they make
+void all the prayers and oblations of the faithful for the deceased....
+I must inform you also, that those of them who have returned to our
+church, tell us that they had great numbers of their persuasion,
+scattered almost everywhere.... And as for those who were burnt, they,
+in defense they made of themselves, told us that this heresy had been
+_concealed from the time of the martyrs_ [by which is meant the early
+period of Christianity] and that it had existed in Greece and other
+countries."
+
+Although Bernard began a strenuous opposition to these people, still he
+testifies: "If you ask them of their faith, nothing can be more
+Christian-like; and if you observe their conversation, nothing can be
+more blameless, and what they speak they make good by their actions....
+As to life and manners, he circumvents no man, overreaches no man, does
+violence to no man. He fasts much and eats not the bread of idleness;
+but works with his hands for his support."
+
+Claudius, archbishop of Turin, who joined in hunting and persecuting
+them to the death, writes, "Their heresy excepted, they generally live a
+purer life than other Christians." Again, "In their lives they are
+perfect, irreproachable, and without reproach among men, addicting
+themselves with all their might to the service of God."
+
+The sum and substance of their offense is mentioned by Cassini, a
+Franciscan friar, where he says, "That ALL THE ERRORS of these Waldenses
+consisted in this, that they denied the church of Rome to be the holy
+mother church, and _would not obey her traditions_."
+
+In conclusion I quote from the celebrated Roman Catholic historian
+Thuanus. He states their tenets as follows: "That the church of Rome,
+because it renounced the true faith of Christ, WAS THE WHORE OF BABYLON
+... that consequently _no obedience was to be paid to the Pope_, or to
+the bishops who maintain her errors; that a monastic life was the sink
+and dungeon of the church, the vows of which [relating to celibacy] were
+vain ... that the orders of the priesthood were marks of the great beast
+mentioned in the Apocalypse; that the fire of purgatory, the solemn
+mass, the consecration days of churches, the worship of saints, and
+propitiations for the dead, were the devices of Satan." Lib. VI, Sec.
+16, Lib. XXVII. The chief offense of these so-called heretics seems to
+have been that they denounced the Pope as "Antichrist" and the apostate
+church of Rome as "the Babylonish harlot."
+
+ 7. And when they shall have finished their testimony, the beast
+ that ascendeth out of the bottomless pit shall make war against
+ them, and shall overcome them, and kill them.
+
+ 8. And their dead bodies shall lie in the street of the great
+ city, which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt, where also
+ our Lord was crucified.
+
+ 9. And they of the people and kindreds and tongues and nations
+ shall see their dead bodies three days and an half, and shall
+ not suffer their dead bodies to be put in graves.
+
+ 10. And they that dwell upon the earth shall rejoice over them,
+ and make merry, and shall send gifts one to another; because
+ these two prophets tormented them that dwelt on the earth.
+
+ 11. And after three days and an half the Spirit of life from God
+ entered into them, and they stood upon their feet; and great
+ fear fell upon them which saw them.
+
+ 12. And they heard a great voice from heaven saying unto them,
+ Come up hither. And they ascended up to heaven in a cloud; and
+ their enemies beheld them.
+
+At the expiration of the twelve hundred and sixty years the scene
+changes. The prophecy of the witnesses in their sackcloth state, hidden
+away from sight in the wilderness, ends, and they are now brought out
+into public view--but only to be killed. Their slaughter takes place at
+the hands of the beast. When we come to consider chapter XIII, we shall
+see that the Papacy is described as a beast reigning for forty-two
+months, or twelve hundred and sixty years, after which time another
+beast possessing great power and authority appears on the scene. This
+second beast is Protestantism, and through it the murder of the two
+witnesses at the close of the Papal supremacy in the vision before us
+was effected.
+
+It would seem, by the similarity of statement that the beast "ascendeth
+out of the bottomless pit," that the slaughter of the witnesses was
+effected by the Papal beast (chap. 17:7, 8); but the Mohammedan delusion
+also is said to have proceeded from "the bottomless pit." Chap. 9:1, 2.
+The expression _bottomless pit_ is doubtless used merely to signify the
+source of certain powers in contradistinction to the heavenly source
+from which others proceeded. Although the Papal beast is said to have
+originated in the bottomless pit, the second beast also doubtless
+proceeded from the same source, for he possessed many of the
+characteristics of the former, and caused the earth to worship the first
+beast, as explained in chapter 13. That he was not of heavenly origin is
+shown by the statement that he came up "out of the earth." Chap. 13:11.
+But the direct proof that it was the Protestant beast, and not the Papal
+beast--although the same expression as to its origin is used concerning
+it--that slew the two witnesses, is found in the fact that the reign of
+the first, or Papal, beast was limited to forty two months (chap. 13:5),
+corresponding to the twelve hundred and sixty years in which the
+witnesses prophesied in the vision before us; while it was after the
+_close_ of this period, at the time when the second, or Protestant,
+beast arose (chap. 13:11), that the witnesses were slain.
+
+To many this may seem a hard saying; but I request that the matter be
+given the most careful attention in the light of prophecy and divine
+truth. It is true that the Sixteenth Century Reformation at first
+brought the witnesses out of the wilderness of seclusion where they had
+remained during the long night of Romanism and exhibited them to the
+public view; but when thus placed upon exhibition, they were soon robbed
+entirely of their position as the Vicars, or Governors, of God's church.
+Since creed and sect-making first began, the Word and Spirit have not
+possesed governing power and authority in Protestantism; but men have
+usurped that place and prescribed authoritative rules of faith and
+practise for the people. The principles of Higher Criticism have so far
+pervaded the realm of sectarian theology that a vast number of the
+clergy no longer regard the Bible as the inspired word of God to man,
+but simply as a remarkable piece of religious literature recording the
+natural development of the religious consciousness among a peculiarly
+sensitive race of people. Protestantism certainly has placed the Bible
+on the dissecting table and dismembered it in a manner wholly unknown
+before. While Protestants will not for a moment allow the blessed Book
+to be hidden out of sight--put "into graves"--still they will not grant
+it that place it should occupy as the sole discipline of faith, so it is
+a dead letter to them. That all-glorious doctrine of Bible _unity_,
+which fills the whole New Testament, strikes a deathblow to all the
+carnal divisions and institutions of sectarianism; and so with one
+accord they unite in _fighting it_. "Oh, the good old blessed Bible! we
+could not do without it," say they; yet, as everybody knows, they are
+governed by the discipline and laws that they or their representatives
+have formulated. Thus, the Word and Spirit of God are brought under the
+public gaze, only to be treated with such indignity in God's sight, and
+killed; while infidels look on, and tauntingly remark, "Either the
+religion of to-day is no Christianity, or the Word of God is a lie."
+
+In the beginning of this dispensation the church of God not only
+consisted of all those who were spiritual, but constituted a visible,
+organic body as well, made up of numerous local congregations that were
+separate in the management of their internal affairs, yet interrelated
+with each other, and were directed by humble pastors, who were, in
+reference to each other, _equal_. The Word of God was their only
+discipline, and the Spirit of God, their great Teacher and Guide. Thus,
+the two witnesses were active in their official position, in the public
+view, as the Vicars or Governors of the church of God on earth. When,
+however, men usurped the place of these Vicars by ignoring the Spirit
+and rejecting the Word and making their own rules of faith, the effect
+was a national hierarchy--the church of Rome, which for twelve hundred
+and sixty years stood in the public view. Yet the two witnesses were
+still alive, though driven into obscurity and "clothed in sackcloth";
+for they still acted in their official position in the congregations of
+the medieval Christians already referred to, who resisted the doctrines
+of men and clung tenaciously to the simple, primitive form of church
+government and allowed the Spirit and Word authority supreme.
+
+But during the Protestant era Christians the world over became
+identified with the various sects, hence were representing to the world
+the beast power instead of the true church. Thus, during the Protestant
+period, the church of God, _in its organic form_, was not represented
+anywhere on earth; for its members were scattered among those who were
+"worshiping the beast and his image." Hence the two witnesses, during
+this era, had no place to operate in their official capacity as the
+Governors of God's church and are therefore represented as slain. The
+government of Protestant sects is not effected by the Word and Spirit;
+for the institutions themselves are of human origin, and men are their
+law-makers and governors.
+
+When the two witnesses are deprived of their governing power and the
+rules and disciplines of men substituted in their place, a decline into
+worldliness is the invariable result. This has been the case repeatedly
+in sectarianism. In fact, Protestantism, as a component part of that
+great city Babylon, has so given herself over to "revellings,
+banquetings, and abominable idolatries," that a voice from heaven has
+declared her to be "the habitation of devils, and the hold of every foul
+spirit, and a cage of every unclean and hateful bird." Chap. 18:2.
+Witness the shows, festivals, frolics, grab-bag parties, kissing bees,
+cake-walk lotteries, and other abominations unnumbered, that are carried
+on without shame, under the guise of religion, in the high places of
+this modern Babylon! If the Word of God with the full power and
+authority of his Spirit could be turned in upon them, it would be like
+the torment of fire; but no, it is dead to them, and they rejoice and
+make merry and continue in "the same excess of riot."
+
+In the description before us, this city of sectarianism in which the two
+witnesses are slain is "spiritually [or mystically] called Sodom and
+Egypt, where also our Lord was crucified." It is a mystical Sodom, Egypt
+and Jerusalem--a Sodom for wickedness and lewdness, an Egypt for the
+captivity and oppression of God's people, and a Jerusalem for the
+crucifying of the Son of God afresh and putting him to an open shame.
+Thus, this city mystically combines the wickedness of the three most
+wicked places on earth--Sodom, Egypt, and Jerusalem. These facts we
+shall notice more particularly hereafter.
+
+But these two witnesses were not always to remain trampled under foot in
+the streets of great Babylon; for a time came when "the spirit of life
+from God entered into them, and they stood upon their feet; and great
+fear fell upon them which saw them." In this is portrayed the
+reformation which is now taking place in the world. About the year A.D.
+1880 God began to raise up holy men and women whom he commissioned to
+preach the everlasting gospel of the kingdom again; and they went forth
+in his name calling upon God's people everywhere to come "out of all
+places where they had been scattered in the cloudy and dark day" (Ezek.
+34:12) and to take up their abode in the one true church of Jesus
+Christ, his body, independent of all sectarianism and the creeds and
+disciplines of men. In this assembly of the faithful, gathered out of
+all nations, no man nor set of men attempts to form laws or regulations
+for the supervision of spiritual affairs; but with one consent they
+humbly bow before the only true Lawgiver (Jas. 4:12), and say, "The
+government shall be upon his shoulder" (Isa. 9:6); and the Word and
+Spirit of God have perfect control of his saints. Halleluiah! They can
+preach, teach, and believe every word of truth placed in the Sacred
+Volume, without a conference or discipline of men forbidding. Standing
+upon this apostolic platform of eternal truth, they hurl the thunders of
+divine judgment against the hidden works of darkness, causing the
+graceless devotees of fallen Babylon to quake with fear and to "gnaw
+their tongues for pain."
+
+After the resurrection of these witnesses, a voice from heaven is heard,
+saying, "Come up hither. And they ascended up to heaven in a cloud; and
+their enemies beheld them." This ascension to heaven in the presence of
+their enemies, which according to this chapter occurred before the end
+of time, has reference undoubtedly to their great exaltation. "Thy
+greatness is grown, and _reacheth unto heaven_." Dan. 4:22. We see that
+in this text a similar expression signifies great exaltation. So this
+work is destined to assume such proportions that the people of earth may
+have the privilege of seeing the truth. In the preceding chapter John,
+as a symbol of the church at this time, under the living ministry
+symbolized by the rain-bow angel, was told that he "must prophesy again
+before many peoples, and nations, and tongues, and kings." Verse 11.
+
+The signification of the time-period of three days and a half claims our
+attention next. According to the foregoing explanation, it will be seen
+that the writer applies it as three centuries and a half, or three
+hundred and fifty years--from A.D. 1530 to A.D. 1880. It will be
+necessary to adduce strong reasons for thus applying it. In the first
+place, the time-prophecies of the Bible are by no means confined to the
+year-day manner of interpretation. Many times in the Old Testament the
+expression occurs, "And it shall come to pass _in that day_," which
+expression is admitted by all to have reference to the gospel day, or
+the entire gospel dispensation. When the church of Philadelphia was
+promised deliverance from the _hour_ of temptation which was to come
+upon all the world (chap. 3:10), no one supposes that a short period of
+only one week is specified. The rulers of the ten kingdoms were to
+"receive power as kings _one hour_ with the beast" (chap. 17:12), which
+expression will be shown later to really cover many years. We might
+point out many such exceptions were it necessary.
+
+Again, it was the beast that came up at the expiration of the twelve
+hundred and sixty years, or Protestantism, that slaughtered the
+witnesses, and we could not expect their resurrection during the reign
+of Protestantism, which every one will admit was longer than three and
+one-half years, according to the year-day application. The events as
+they have developed prove that it was just three and one-half centuries
+before Protestantism was entirely ignored and the Spirit and Word
+recognized as the sole Governors in the church of God. Besides, the
+general trend of events following the formation of Protestantism
+naturally divide the succeeding centuries into separate periods. The
+first (sixteenth) was a fierce conflict for the establishment of
+Protestantism; the second (seventeenth) was a violent reaction, wherein
+the church of Rome nearly triumphed over her hated opposers; while the
+third (eighteenth) is specially noted in history as the period of
+infidelity or reason. This division of time was so noticable that
+D'Aubigne, who wrote about A.D. 1835, in his famous History of the
+Reformation, refers to it in the following remarkable language: "It has
+been said that the three last centuries, the sixteenth, the seventeenth,
+and the eighteenth, may be conceived as an immense battle of _three
+days'_ duration. We willingly adopt this beautiful comparison.... The
+first day was the battle of God, the second the battle of the priest,
+the third the battle of Reason. What will be the fourth? [1830-1930] In
+our opinion, the confused strife, the deadly contest of all these powers
+together, TO END IN THE VICTORY OF HIM TO WHOM TRIUMPH BELONGS." Book
+XI, Chap. 9.
+
+The writer is thankful to God that he is permitted to see the fourth day
+ending "in the victory of Him to whom triumph belongs." And may we, my
+brethren, be grateful to our dear Lord that it is our privilege to have
+part in this glorious reformation of divine truth that is now sweeping
+over the world and gathering the elect together for the soon-coming of
+the Savior.
+
+ 13. And the same hour was there a great earthquake, and the
+ tenth part of the city fell, and in the earthquake were slain of
+ men seven thousand: and the remnant were affrighted, and gave
+ glory to the God of heaven.
+
+ 14. The second woe is past; and, behold, the third woe cometh
+ quickly.
+
+At the time the witnesses reach their greatest exaltation, a great
+earthquake takes place upon earth, and the tenth part of the city falls.
+The nature of the symbol would point us to some political upheaval.
+Since the great city of Babylon is composed of different divisions (as
+will be seen hereafter), it is a matter of doubt as to which part of the
+city is here referred to; but most probably that of the hierarchy as
+embraced in one of the ten divisions or kingdoms. Since the fulfilment
+of this prediction is yet future, I speak with hesitation and wait for
+the event to make all clear. It is probable, however, that either in
+this political revolution, or about that time, the Ottoman power will be
+overthrown; for immediately the announcement is made, "The second woe is
+past; and, behold, the third woe cometh quickly."
+
+ 15. And the seventh angel sounded; and there were great voices
+ in heaven, saying, The kingdoms of this world are become the
+ kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign for
+ ever and ever.
+
+ 16. And the four and twenty elders, which sat before God on
+ their seats, fell upon their faces, and worshipped God,
+
+ 17. Saying, We give thee thanks, O Lord God Almighty, which art,
+ and wast, and art to come; because thou hast taken to thee thy
+ great power, and hast reigned.
+
+ 18. And the nations were angry, and thy wrath is come, and the
+ time of the dead, that they should be judged, and that thou
+ shouldest give reward unto thy servants the prophets, and to the
+ saints, and them that fear thy name, small and great; and
+ shouldest destroy them which destroy the earth.
+
+ 19. And the temple of God was opened in heaven, and there was
+ seen in his temple the ark of his testament: and there were
+ lightnings, and voices, and thunderings, and an earthquake, and
+ great hail.
+
+The seventh angel that here sounded is the third woe-angel, and
+according to the description before us, ushers in the general judgment.
+When the temple of God was opened that this mighty event might take
+place on earth, there were "lightnings, and voices, and thunderings, and
+an earthquake, and great hail." Wondrous commotions took place in the
+world, for kingdoms and empires were all overthrown, and Jesus Christ
+was the only king remaining, and his mission was to raise the dead that
+they might be judged, to give reward to the prophets and saints, and to
+banish with everlasting destruction those that corrupted the earth. The
+description itself is too plain to need further comment.
+
+"The temple of God" that was opened in heaven is to be understood as
+symbolical (as explained in chap. 6:9), and not literal. In other words,
+the heavenly world appeared to John symbolized after the sanctuary of
+the temple on earth. Chap. 15:5-8; 16:1, 7, 17, etc. This is proved
+clearly by the fact that, when the real heaven, the future home of the
+redeemed, is described, John says, "I saw _no temple_ therein." Chap.
+21:22.
+
+Before dismissing the visions of this chapter, I wish to call attention
+to one more point hitherto referred to--that of parallelism and
+contrast. While we have the history of the church apostate described by
+the treading down of the holy city, we have also, in immediate contrast
+and running parallel therewith, a history of the true church existing
+during the same period of twelve hundred and sixty years, although it
+was in a sackcloth state. And while the reign of Protestantism is
+described as a period during which the two witnesses were in one sense
+dead, we have in immediate contrast a history of the last great
+reformation, in which the spirit of life from God again enters these
+same witnesses, and they stand upright on their feet, to the
+consternation of all their adversaries. Amen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+ And there appeared a great wonder in heaven; a woman clothed
+ with the sun, and the moon under her feet, and upon her head a
+ crown of twelve stars:
+
+ 2. And she being with child cried, travailing in birth, and
+ pained to be delivered.
+
+ 3. And there appeared another wonder in heaven; and behold a
+ great red dragon, having seven heads and ten horns, and seven
+ crowns upon his heads.
+
+ 4. And his tail drew the third part of the stars of Heaven, and
+ did cast them to the earth: and the dragon stood before the
+ woman which was ready to be delivered, for to devour her child
+ as soon as it was born.
+
+ 5. And she brought forth a man child, who was to rule all
+ nations with a rod of iron: and her child was caught up unto
+ God, and to his throne.
+
+ 6. And the woman fled into the wilderness, where she hath a
+ place prepared of God, that they should feed her there a
+ thousand two hundred and threescore days.
+
+The three principal objects of this vision are the woman clothed with
+the sun, the man-child born of her, and a red dragon with seven heads
+and ten horns. These, being drawn from nature and human life, would
+point us both to the church and to the state for their fulfilment. The
+symbols, also, are living agents, and we should expect the objects they
+represent to be such.
+
+This woman is an appropriate symbol of the church of God, which is
+composed of living, intelligent beings; and that it is the true and not
+an apostate one, is shown by the fact that upon her flight into the
+wilderness she had a place prepared of God where she was nourished for
+twelve hundred and sixty days. In a subsequent portion of the Apocalypse
+a vile harlot is taken as the representative of the church apostate. In
+this way a proper correspondence of character and quality is kept up.
+This woman appeared, not in the temple above, but in the firmament of
+heaven, where she was clothed with the sun, the moon under her feet, and
+upon her head a crown of twelve stars. Thus the brightest luminaries of
+heaven were gathered around her. Arrayed in this splendid manner, she is
+easily distinguished from an apostate church, which would not be so
+highly favored with such attire in this exalted position. Doubtless the
+objects with which she is adorned have some special signification. The
+moon is a fit symbol of the old covenant, above which the church had
+just risen, only to be clothed in the superior brightness and glory of
+the new covenant. And as the moon shines only with a borrowed light,
+obtaining its illumination from the sun; so, also, the old covenant was
+only a shadow of the good things to come and now stands eclipsed in the
+brightness and transcendant glory of that new and better dispensation.
+According to the explanation given of the seven stars in the right hand
+of Jesus (chap. 1:19), we are authorized to regard stars as a symbol of
+Christian ministers, and the twelve that appear most prominently in the
+first history of the church are the twelve apostles of the Lamb.
+
+The dragon, a beast from the natural world, would properly symbolize a
+tyrannical, persecuting government. This was a red dragon with seven
+heads and ten horns, and seven crowns upon his heads. In the following
+chapter we read that John saw a beast rising up out of the sea with the
+same number of heads and horns, but ten crowns on his horns. And the
+dragon gave him (the beast) "his power, and his seat, and great
+authority." Verse 2. So far as the heads and horns are concerned, the
+only difference between the two is that the crowns--a symbol of supreme
+authority and power--have been transferred from the heads to the horns.
+In chapter 17 John saw the same beast again and there received the
+following explanation of the seven heads: "And there are seven kings:
+five are fallen, and one is, and the other is not yet come; and when he
+cometh he must continue a short space." Verse 10. Concerning the horns
+he was told, "The ten horns which thou sawest are ten kings, which have
+received no kingdom as yet." Verse 12. With this explanation before us
+it will be easy to identify the dragon of chapter 12 and the beast of
+chapters 13 and 17 as the Roman empire, the first under the Pagan and
+the second under the Papal form. The seven heads signify the seven
+distinct forms of supreme government that ruled successively in the
+empire. The five that had already fallen when John received the vision
+were the Regal power, the Consular, the Decemvirate, the Military
+Tribunes and the Triumvirate. "One is"--the Imperial.[8] The
+identification of its seventh and last head we shall leave until later.
+The ten horns, or kingdoms, which had not yet arisen when the Revelation
+was given, were the ten minor kingdoms that grew out of the Western
+Roman empire during its decline and fall. The historian Machiard, in
+giving an account of these nations, and without any reference to the
+Bible or its prophecies, reckons ten kingdoms, as follows:
+
+1. The Ostrogoths in Maesia;
+2. The Visigoths in Pannonia;
+3. Sueves and Alans in Gascoigne and Spain;
+4. Vandals in Africa;
+5. Franks in France;
+6. Burgundians in Burgundy;
+7. Heruli and Turings in Italy;
+8. Saxons and Anglis in Britain;
+9. Huns in Hungary;
+10. Lombards, at first on the Danube, and afterwards
+in Italy.
+
+[Footnote 8: The fact that commentators and historians differ in their
+enumeration of the forms of government that ruled in Rome is often a
+source of confusion to ordinary readers. Hence an explanation is
+necessary. Rome was first ruled by kings, and therefore the first form
+of government is designated by either the term _Kings_ or the term
+_Regal Power_. Upon the expulsion of the kings and the formation of the
+republic, the royal power was entrusted to two men who held it for a
+year, and were called _consuls_. In times of great public danger the
+consuls were superseded by a special officer called a _dictator_, who
+had supreme power. As the early life of the republic was often
+threatened with grave dangers, Rome was often governed by a dictator;
+hence this form of government is sometimes called the Dictatorship. The
+third form was the _Decemviri_, a government by ten men, who compiled
+the twelve famous Tables of Laws. In 444 B.C. another change was made by
+the appointment of _Military Tribunes_ (whose numbers varied) with
+consular power. These were frequently called _Consuls_. The fifth form
+was the _Triumvirate_, a government by three men. The sixth was the
+_Imperial_. Hence the different forms can be enumerated thus: 1. The
+Regal Power, or Kings. 2. Consula or Dictators. 3. Decemvirate. 4.
+Military Tribunes, Tribunes, or Consuls. 5. Triumvirate. 6. Imperial.
+The seventh form will be considered in another place. See remarks on
+chap. 17:7-11.]
+
+Other historians agree substantially with this. These kingdoms all arose
+within one hundred and seventy years. The dragon is described with the
+horns, although they were not now in existence and did not arise until
+nearly the time when the dragon became the beast; likewise, he is
+represented with seven heads, although he really possessed only one head
+at a time, and five had already fallen and one being yet to come. He is
+described with all the heads and horns he ever had or was to have.
+
+The tail of this dragon "drew the third part of the stars of heaven, and
+did cast them to the earth." Some people who have never learned the
+nature of symbolic language try to imagine such a literal creature as
+the one here described and picture in their minds what an awful thing it
+would be to see the third part of the stars falling to the earth. But
+real stars that are fixed or planetary never fall, and if they did, they
+would be as apt to fall in an opposite direction as toward the earth.
+Besides, if one should come tumbling down here, it would knock this
+world into oblivion. But with a knowledge of the proper use of symbols
+we can easily identify this dragon with the Roman empire under its Pagan
+form; and the casting down of the stars, which were doubtless used as
+symbols of ministers as in verse 1, signifies the warfare which this
+awful beast power waged against the church of God, in which her
+ministers were always a shining mark for the first persecution and
+suffered terribly for the cause they represented.
+
+The man-child is the next object that claims our attention. Some have
+supposed that it represented Jesus Christ in his first advent to the
+world. But this could not be; for Christ is never represented as being
+the offspring of the church, but, on the other hand, is declared to be
+its originator. Some, also, have supposed that it represented the church
+bringing forth Christ to the world in a spiritual sense. This, however,
+would be in direct conflict with the known laws of symbolic language. A
+visible, living, intelligent agent, such as this man-child evidently
+was, could not be the symbol of an invisible spiritual presence.
+Besides, it has been clearly shown that Christ always appears in his own
+person, unrepresented by another, from the fact that he can not be
+symbolized. It is clear that this child can not signify a single
+definite personage; for after he is caught up to God, there is still a
+remnant of the woman's seed left upon earth. See verse 17.
+
+What, then, does the man-child signify? It symbolizes the mighty host of
+new converts or children that the early church by her earnest travail
+brought forth. The seeming incongruity that the church, or mother, and
+her children are alike only serves to establish the point in question
+when rightly understood. A child is of the same substance as its mother
+and is designed to perpetuate the race. So, also, the new-born babes in
+the church are just the same spiritually as those who are older, and are
+intended to perpetuate the church of God on earth. But this explanation
+of itself is not sufficient to entirely satisfy an inquiring mind, and
+the question is sure to be asked, Why was it necessary that the church
+of God in this dispensation should be represented by two individuals--a
+woman and her son? I also will ask a question--Why, on the other hand,
+was it necessary that the great apostasy of this dispensation should be
+represented by the double-figure of a woman and her daughters? The
+answer to the latter question would readily be given--to symbolize two
+distinct phases of apostasy. So, also, it was necessary that a
+double-symbol, such as a woman and her son, should be chosen to set
+forth _two phases_ of the church brought to view in this chapter. If but
+a single symbol were used, how could the church be thereby represented
+as continuing on earth and fleeing into the wilderness and at the same
+time be represented as "overcome," persecuted to the death, and "caught
+up unto God and to his throne"? This double-phase of the church--the
+experience of the saints on earth and the reign of the martyrs in
+Paradise--will be made very clear to the reader hereafter. But it would
+be impossible to set forth these two phases under one symbol, and
+therefore two are chosen.
+
+There is also direct Scripture testimony on this point. "Before she
+travailed, she brought forth; before her pain came, she was delivered of
+a _man-child._ Who hath heard such a thing? who hath seen such things?
+Shall the earth be made to bring forth in one day? or shall a nation be
+born at once? For as soon as Zion travailed, she brought forth her
+children." Isa. 66:7, 8. According to Heb. 12:22, 23, this Zion, or
+Sion, referred to is the New Testament church, and the man-child that
+she is said to bring forth is interpreted by Isaiah as "a nation born at
+once." Such language perfectly describes the rapid increase in the
+Christian church on Pentecost and shortly afterward, when thousands were
+added in one day. According to the apostle Paul, the host of Jews and
+Gentiles reconciled unto God through Jesus Christ constituted "one new
+man" in Christ. Eph. 2:15. See also Gal. 3:28. R.V. This man-child was
+to rule all nations with a rod of iron. For an explanation of this rule
+see remarks on chapter 2:26, 27. The twelve hundred and sixty days will
+be referred to later.
+
+ 7. And there was war in heaven: Michael and his angels fought
+ against the dragon; and the dragon fought and his angels,
+
+ 8. And prevailed not; neither was their place found any more in
+ heaven.
+
+ 9. And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called
+ the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: he was
+ cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him.
+
+ 10. And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven, Now is come
+ salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the
+ power of his Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast
+ down, which accused them before our God day and night.
+
+ 11. And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the
+ word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives unto the
+ death.
+
+ 12. Therefore rejoice, ye heavens, and ye that dwell in them.
+ Woe to the inhabiters of the earth and of the sea! for the devil
+ is come down unto you, having great wrath, because he knoweth
+ that he hath but a short time.
+
+ 13. And when the dragon saw that he was cast unto the earth, he
+ persecuted the woman which brought forth the man child.
+
+ 14. And to the woman were given two wings of a great eagle, that
+ she might fly into the wilderness, into her place, where she is
+ nourished for a time, and times, and half a time, from the face
+ of the serpent.
+
+ 15. And the serpent cast out of his mouth water as a flood after
+ the woman, that he might cause her to be carried away of the
+ flood.
+
+ 16. And the earth helped the woman, and the earth opened her
+ mouth, and swallowed up the flood which the dragon east out of
+ his mouth.
+
+ 17. And the dragon was wroth with the woman, and went to make
+ war with the remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of
+ God, and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.
+
+In this vision we have a series of events covering exactly the same
+period of time as that of the preceeding one; namely, a history of the
+church up to and including her flight into the wilderness, and of the
+same opposing dragon. In this description, however, the events are more
+perfectly detailed.
+
+Because this dragon was called the Devil and Satan, many have been led
+into the idea that it signified the Prince of darkness himself. But
+surely we could not suppose that Beelzebub has any such appearance as
+this dragon. The foregoing explanation concerning his heads and horns
+shows conclusively that the Pagan Roman empire is meant, and not
+Beelzebub. Why, then, was it called the Devil and Satan? Among the
+Hebrews the term _Satan_ was frequently used in a very liberal sense and
+applied to different objects, signifying merely an adversary or opposer.
+According to Young's Analytical Concordance the Hebrew word for Satan is
+translated _adversary_ in a number of texts, a few of which I will refer
+to. Num. 22:22: "And the angel of the Lord stood in the way for an
+_adversary_ [Satan, Heb.] against him." Here an angel of the Lord is
+called a Satan to Balaam. In 1 Sam. 29:4 David is called an adversary
+(Heb. Satan) to the Philistines. In 2 Sam. 19:22 certain opposers are
+said to be adversaries (Satans, Heb.) unto David; while in 1 Kings 11:25
+a certain man was said to be an adversary (Satan) to Israel all the days
+of Solomon. A number of other instances could be given if necessary. In
+the New Testament, also, the term _Satan_ is sometimes used to signify
+merely an opposer. "But he turned, and said unto Peter, Get thee behind
+me, Satan." Mat. 16:23. In 1 Cor. 10:20 Paul declares "that the things
+which the Gentiles sacrifice, they sacrifice to _devils_." Paganism
+stood as the great opposer of Christianity, hence was a Satan
+(adversary) unto it; while the apostle denominated its religious rites
+as devil-worship. I do not question the fact that the spirit of
+Beelzebub was manifested in the thing; but the dragon itself was the
+empire, as is proved by the heads and the horns. However, the Devil and
+the agency through which he works are often used interchangeably. Satan
+and the serpent in Eden stand in the same relation as do Satan, or
+Beelzebub, and Paganism in the New Testament; hence to bind Paganism was
+to bind the Devil and Satan in one important sense.
+
+The dragon would be a beast from the natural world (if such a creature
+actually existed) and as such could represent nothing more than a civil
+empire; but in the vision under consideration he is represented as
+accompanied by _angels_ actuated by his spirit and defending his cause.
+By this combination of symbols is set forth the politico-religious
+system of the empire--a religion that denied the doctrine of the one
+exclusive God and the divinity of Jesus Christ. It was the religion of
+_infidelity_. It was the dragon as a false religious system that
+Christianity attacked, and not the State itself. The following quotation
+from Butler's Ecclesiastical History will show the relation of
+Christians to the empire:
+
+"The Romans were accustomed to tolerate all new religions if they took
+their place by the side of those already existing, and if they did not
+cast reproach upon them.... But Christianity, by its very nature
+exclusive in its claims ... was offensive to the Romans and to the
+State. A religion which cast contempt upon the religions and rites
+sanctioned by the laws, and endeavored to draw men away from them,
+seemed to express thereby contempt and hostility for the State itself.
+Hence Christianity was branded as a malignant superstition, and
+Christians spoken of as the enemies of the human race.... From the
+letter of Pliny to Trajan, it was evidently recorded as an _religio
+illicita_, and the mere fact of being a Christian was counted of itself
+a crime.... The exclusiveness of Christianity seemed also to place its
+disciples in a position of direct disloyalty to the emperors and the
+State. 'The emperor was ex-officio _Pontifex Maximus_; the gods were
+national. Cicero declares as a principle of legislation, that no one
+should be allowed to worship foreign gods, unless they were recognized
+by public statute. Maecenas thus counselled Augustas: Honor the gods
+according to the customs of your ancestors, and compel others to worship
+them. Hate and punish those who bring in strange gods.' As the Roman
+empire was founded on the absolutism of the State, and made nothing of
+personal rights, Christianity, which first taught and acknowledged them,
+would be peculiarly offensive to the State. Moreover, the conscientious
+refusal of Christians to pay divine honor to the emperor and his
+statutes, and to take part in idolatrous ceremonies at public festivals
+... and their constant assembling themselves together, brought them
+under the suspicion and obloquy of the emperors and the people." Pp. 49,
+50.
+
+The dragon was stationed in the same heaven where the woman appeared.
+This signifies his exalted position in the world. While the dragon was
+in the height of his power and glory, Michael (Jesus Christ--Jude 9; 1
+Thes. 4:16; John 5:28) and his followers appeared on the scene, and a
+fierce battle for supremacy ensued, resulting in the final victory of
+the hosts of Michael. That it was against the dragon as a religious
+system that the Christians fought is proved by the kind of weapons they
+employed. "And they overcame him by the _blood of the Lamb_ and by the
+_word of their testimony_; and they loved not their lives unto the
+death." Christianity never sought to overturn the civil empire, but did
+with all the power of truth oppose the huge system of error sustained by
+it and gained such decisive victories that the cry was heard, "Now is
+come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power
+of his Christ; for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which
+accused them before our God day and night." The Devil himself suffered a
+severe defeat when his favorite agents, the dragon and his followers,
+were cast down from their lofty position and Christianity was exalted
+instead. Says Butler: "The final victory of Christianity over heathenism
+and Judaism, and the mightiest empire of the ancient world, a victory
+gained without physical force, by the moral power of faith and
+perseverance, of faith and love, is one of the sublimest spectacles of
+history, and one of the strongest evidences of the divinity and
+indestructible life of our holy religion." P. 40.
+
+But the fact that many Christians lost their lives in this conflict
+(verse 11), insomuch that the man-child is represented as being caught
+up unto God (verse 5), shows that the dragon employed also the arm of
+civil power in his opposition to the growing truth. The rapid increase
+of Christianity, despite the violent opposition and persecution of the
+Pagan party, can be no better represented than by a quotation from the
+notable Apology of Tertullian, who wrote during the persecution by
+Septimus Severus, about the end of the second century.
+
+"Rulers of the Roman Empire," he begins, "you surely can not forbid the
+Truth to reach you by the secret pathway of a noiseless book. She knows
+that she is but a sojourner on the earth, and as a stranger finds
+enemies; and more, her origin, her dwelling-place, her hope, her
+rewards, her honors, are above. One thing, meanwhile, she anxiously
+desires of earthly rulers--not to be condemned unknown. What harm can it
+do to give her a hearing?... The outcry is that the State is filled with
+Christians; that they are in the fields, in the citadels, in the
+islands. The lament is, as for some calamity, that both sexes, every age
+and condition, even high rank, are passing over to the Christian faith.
+
+"The outcry is a confession and an argument for our cause; for we are a
+people of yesterday, and yet we have filled every place belonging to
+you--cities, islands, castles, towns, assemblies, your very camp, your
+tribes, companies, palace, senate, forum. We leave to you your temples
+alone. We can count your armies: our numbers in a single province will
+be greater. We have it in our power, without arms and without rebellion,
+to fight against you with the weapon of a simple divorce. We can leave
+you to wage your wars alone. If such a multitude should withdraw into
+some remote corner of the world you would doubtless tremble at your own
+solitude, and ask, 'Of whom are we the governors?'
+
+"It is a human right that every man should worship according to his own
+convictions ... a forced religion is no religion at all.... Men say that
+the Christians are the cause of every public disaster. If the Tiber
+rises as high as the city walls, if the Nile does not rise over the
+fields, if the heavens give no rain, if there be an earthquake, if a
+famine or pestilence, straightway they cry, Away with the Christians to
+the lion.... But go zealously on, ye good governors, you will stand
+higher with the people if you kill us, torture us, condemn us, grind us
+to the dust; your injustice is the proof that we are innocent. God
+permits us to suffer. Your cruelty avails you nothing.... The oftener
+you mow us down the more in number we grow; the blood of Christians is
+seed. What you call our obstinacy is an instructor. For who that sees it
+does not inquire for what we suffer? Who that inquires does not embrace
+our doctrines? Who that embraces them is not ready to give his blood for
+the fulness of God's grace?"
+
+Another writer has said: "The church in this period appears poor in
+earthly possessions and honors, but rich in heavenly grace, in
+world-conquering faith and love and hope; unpopular, even outlawed,
+hated and persecuted, yet far more vigorous and expansive than the
+philosophies of Greece, or the empire of Rome; composed chiefly of
+persons of the lower social ranks, yet attracting the noblest and
+deepest minds of the age, and bearing in her bosom the hope of the
+world; conquering by apparent defeat and growing on the blood of her
+martyrs; great in deeds, greater in sufferings, greatest in death for
+the honor of Christ and the benefit of generations to come."
+
+This triumph of early Christianity over Paganism was a theme worthy of
+the song. "Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our
+God, and the power of his Christ." Even before the death of the
+apostles, according to the younger Pliny, the temples of the gods in
+Asia Minor were almost forsaken. No wonder, then, that even the
+inhabitants of heaven were called upon to rejoice at so great a victory
+attained by the followers of the Lamb. But the same voice also says,
+"Woe to the inhabiters of the earth and of the sea! for the devil is
+come down unto you, having great wrath, because he knoweth that he hath
+but a short time." This represents the violence of the Pagan party upon
+its defeat, being exasperated to the exercise of greater opposition and
+cruelty wherever the means and the power were still in their hands. Cast
+down from his exalted position in the heavens--the religious sphere--his
+ecclesiastical prestige lost, he had no place to abide but in the
+earth--the political kingdom--whence he took up arms, and "woe to the
+inhabitants of the earth." But "the days of Paganism in the empire were
+numbered." The Devil knew that he had but a short time, therefore he
+came down in great wrath. This is in accordance with the facts of
+history. Paganism did not die an easy death, but struggled hard and
+long.
+
+When cast from his high position, however, the dragon "persecuted the
+woman which brought forth the man-child." The true idea expressed in the
+original is that he _pursued_ the woman, and this signification is
+indicated by what follows--"To the woman were given two wings of a great
+eagle, that she might fly into the wilderness, into her place, where she
+is nourished for a time, and times, and half a time, from the face of
+the serpent." The _time_ as a definite period signifies one year; hence
+a time, times, and half a time would be three and one-half years, or
+twelve hundred and sixty days, as before explained. There is an apparent
+incongruity or contradiction of statement in reference to the symbols
+here; but it is a contradiction that when rightly understood throws
+light upon the whole subject. It will be noticed that the woman and
+Michael with his angels symbolize the same object--the people of God.
+Under the latter figure they were triumphant and the dragon was
+defeated. Yet after he was cast down, he turned upon the woman and
+pursued her, and thus, the church appeared to be the defeated party.
+According to this, then, the Pagan party is represented as _prevailing_
+soon after he met _defeat_ and the church apparently _defeated_ soon
+after her period of _triumph_. Here again we have two separate symbols
+of the same object in order to represent two of its different phases.
+
+This is explained satisfactorily by noticing carefully the facts. The
+woman, who is always the true church composed of holy people, was at
+first identical with the visible church, or the great body of
+Christians, and in this condition was successful in spreading the pure
+gospel and casting down the powers of iniquity symbolized by the dragon.
+But the dragon politically, as symbolized by his being a beast from the
+natural world, with heads and horns, remained in power for some time,
+his religious prestige only being lost. Christianity did not attempt to
+cast down the dragon in the sense of destroying the civil empire. As is
+well known, a great spiritual declension followed the period of the
+church's greatest triumph, which decline drove the woman, or the true
+church, into the wilderness; hence to all appearances the church became
+a defeated party. About this same time, the dying cause of Paganism
+revived for a season in terrible severity in the latter part of the
+third century; hence to all appearances the dragon was triumphant. This
+supreme effort of Paganism's to regain its former position will be
+better understood in connection with what follows regarding the flood
+which he cast out of his mouth. But that the dragon was not permanently
+triumphant is shown by the fact that he afterwards resigned his power
+and position unto the beast. Chap. 13:2.
+
+As to the meaning of the "two wings of a great eagle" given the woman to
+aid her in her flight, I am not able to say positively. Some apply them
+to "the grace and providence of God which watched over the church";
+others to the "spiritual gifts of faith, love," etc., which, like
+supporting wings, bore the church above her enemies. But I can not see
+how the wings of a great eagle can properly symbolize such things. They
+are not drawn from the right source. Perhaps nothing more is intended by
+the wings than to denote the fact of her successful flight. That this
+idea is the correct one seems quite clear when we consider the fact that
+the remarkable deliverance of the Israelites from Egyptian bondage is
+set forth under the same figure, that of eagles' wings. "Ye have seen
+what I did unto the Egyptians, and how _I bare you on eagles' wings_,
+and brought you unto myself." Ex. 19:4. With the wings of such a
+powerful bird she was able to escape, so that the dragon could not
+overtake her.
+
+"And the serpent cast out of his mouth water as a flood after the woman,
+that he might cause her to be carried away of the flood. And the earth
+helped the woman, and the earth opened her mouth, and swallowed up the
+flood which the dragon cast out of his mouth." Here is a peculiar
+combination of symbols from different departments--the serpent, a flood
+of water, the woman, and the earth. The last two as allies is a very
+unusual circumstance. Some refer the flood of waters to heresies that
+arose in, or was connected with, the hierarchy about this time; but in
+that case how could it be said that it was the serpent that cast it out?
+Others apply it to errors that the Pagan party introduced baptized with
+the name of Christianity, when they professed to become converts at a
+later period. It is certainly an appropriate _figure of speech_ to say a
+flood of error or of false doctrine; but whether a flood of water is a
+proper _symbol_ of the same is another question. I do not think it is.
+Water, being an object of nature, would point us to something political.
+False doctrines are usually symbolized by something different from
+objects in nature.
+
+There is considerable difficulty in verifying the symbol, but I will
+submit what up to the present has seemed to me as the most satisfactory
+explanation. It appears from the description that this was about the
+last great public effort the dragon made to overwhelm the church and
+that he was exasperated to this supreme effort by the humiliating defeat
+he had suffered. The means he employed was _water_, an object of nature;
+hence we are to look for some great political event by which the dragon
+made his master-effort to destroy the woman shortly after her flight
+into the wilderness. In A.D. 284 Diocletian, a Pagan, succeeded to the
+imperial throne. Before the close of his reign (305), the Christians
+suffered the most terrible persecution ever received at the hands of
+Pagan Rome. It continued ten years--A.D. 302-312. It was the design of
+this emperor to completely extirpate the very name of Christianity, and
+his unfortunate victims were slain by the thousands throughout the
+empire. "But the master-piece of [his] heathen policy was the order to
+seek and burn all copies of the Word of God. Hitherto the enemy had been
+lopping off the branches of the tree whose leaves were for the healing
+of the nations; now the blow was made at the root. It had once been the
+policy of Antiochus Epiphanes, when he madly sought to destroy the
+Jewish Scriptures. It was both wise and wicked. It had but one defect,
+it could not be carried into complete execution. The sacred treasure was
+in too many hands, and too many of its guardians were brave and prudent,
+to make extermination possible. An African bishop said, 'Here is my
+body, take it, burn it; but I will not deliver up the Word of God.' A
+deacon said, 'Never, sir, never! Had I children I would sooner deliver
+them to you than the divine word.' He and his wife were burnt together."
+Butler's Eccl. History, p. 66.
+
+But "_the earth_ helped the woman"--another unlooked-for political
+event. Worn out with the cares of State, boasting that the very name of
+Christ was abolished, and dying with a loathsome disease, the tyrant
+abdicated his throne. A number of individuals claimed imperial honors;
+but Constantine, the ruler of Gaul, Spain, and Britain, fought his way
+against contending rivals and finally entered Rome, the capital, in
+triumph. Enthroned as emperor of the West, he immediately issued an
+edict of toleration favorable to the Christians (A.D. 313) and soon
+became a professed Christian himself and by law made Christianity the
+established religion of the empire. In 324, having crushed all rivals,
+he became sole emperor of the Roman world, and with a view of promoting
+Christianity convened what is known as the First General Council of the
+Church, at Nicaea in Asia Minor, A.D. 325. The prestige of Paganism as a
+religious power had been overthrown long before by the followers of
+Christ, but now its political importance received a death-blow, only a
+few expiring struggles appearing subsequently before the final downfall
+of Western Rome. Thus, the earth helped the woman and swallowed up the
+flood of persecution which the dragon cast out.
+
+"And the dragon was wroth with the woman, and went to make war with the
+remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of God, and have the
+testimony of Jesus." Finding that he could not destroy or exterminate
+the church of God, he determined to make war upon its individual
+members.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+ And I stood upon the sand of the sea, and saw a beast rise up
+ out of the sea, having seven heads and ten horns, and upon his
+ horns ten crowns, and upon his heads the name of blasphemy.
+
+ 2. And the beast which I saw was like unto a leopard, and his
+ feet were as the feet of a bear, and his mouth as the mouth of a
+ lion: and the dragon gave him his power, and his seat, and great
+ authority.
+
+ 3. And I saw one of his heads as it were wounded to death; and
+ his deadly wound was healed: and all the world wondered after
+ the beast.
+
+ 4. And they worshipped the dragon which gave power unto the
+ beast: and they worshipped the beast, saying, Who is like unto
+ the beast? who is able to make war with him?
+
+ 5. And there was given unto him a mouth speaking great things
+ and blasphemies; and power was given unto him to continue forty
+ and two months.
+
+ 6. And he opened his mouth in blasphemy against God, to
+ blaspheme his name, and his tabernacle, and them that dwell in
+ heaven.
+
+ 7. And it was given unto him to make war with the saints, and to
+ overcome them: and power was given him over all kindreds, and
+ tongues, and nations.
+
+ 8. And all that dwell upon the earth shall worship him, whose
+ names are not written in the book of life of the Lamb slain from
+ the foundation of the world.
+
+ 9. If any man have an ear, let him hear.
+
+ 10. He that leadeth into captivity shall go into captivity: he
+ that killeth with the sword must be killed with the sword. Here
+ is the patience and the faith of the saints.
+
+In this vision John beheld a beast rise out of the sea. His
+appearance--like that of a leopard with the feet of a bear and a mouth
+like a lion--indicated that he was some terrible creature. He was also a
+persecutor of the saints, the same as the dragon that preceded him. As
+before explained, this beast, also, symbolizes the Roman empire; for he
+possesses the same heads and horns as the dragon, the only difference
+being that the supreme power and authority, as indicated by the crowns,
+is now vested in the ten horns, or minor kingdoms, instead of in the
+seven heads. The dragon as a political power represented Rome before her
+overthrow by the barbarians; the beast as a political power represents
+new Rome.
+
+A careful study of the characteristics of this beast, however, will show
+that he represents more than a civil power. As a mere beast from the
+natural world he could symbolize nothing more than some political power;
+but it will be noticed that, combined with his beastly nature, there are
+also certain characteristics that belong exclusively to the department
+of human life--a mouth _speaking_ great things; power to magnify himself
+against the God of heaven; the ability to single out the saints of God
+and kill them, and to set himself up as an object to be worshiped, etc.
+This combination of symbols from the two departments--those of animal
+and of human life--points us with absolute certainty to Rome as a
+politico-religious system. Ask any historian what world-wide power
+succeeded Rome Pagan, and he will answer at once, "Rome Papal."
+
+While it is not my general design to explain the many lines of prophetic
+truth described under similar symbols in other parts of the Bible, yet I
+will ask the reader here to pardon the slight digression while I call
+attention briefly to a few thoughts in the seventh chapter of Daniel
+regarding this same Papal power.
+
+Daniel received a vision of four great beasts, which were interpreted to
+symbolize four universal monarchies. Verse 17. These were the
+Babylonian, the Medo-Persian, the Greco-Macedonian, and the Roman. The
+fourth beast possessed ten horns, which were explained to signify ten
+kingdoms to arise out of the fourth empire. This is identical with the
+dragon of Rev. 12, except the latter possessed seven heads not mentioned
+by Daniel. In the midst of the ten horns (ten minor kingdoms) grew up a
+_little_ horn, which soon assumed greater proportions than his fellows,
+taking the place of three of the original horns, and into his hand the
+saints of the Most High were given for "a time and times and the
+dividing of time," or twelve hundred and sixty years. This eleventh horn
+differed from the ten in that it possessed a mouth speaking great
+things, and the eyes of a man. A horn with eyes and mouth in it is a
+very unusual thing, yet it is just such a combination as we might expect
+when we possess a correct knowledge of symbols. Being drawn from two
+departments--human life and animal life--this double-symbol directs us
+to a politico-religious system that came up among the ten horns that
+grew out of the old Roman empire. We instantly identify it with the
+growing Papacy, which arose to a position of great authority in
+conjunction with the new Roman empire.
+
+Three of the horns, or temporal kingdoms, were overthrown in order to
+give room for the complete development of this politico-religious power.
+Since great changes have frequently occurred among the nations of Europe
+originally embraced in the ten minor kingdoms, different powers have
+been referred to as the three described in Daniel's prophecy; but the
+most satisfactory explanation to my mind is that of the three kingdoms
+in Italy that were overthrown as if to give the hierarchy room for
+development, and that gave the Papacy its _first_ temporal sovereignty,
+thus completing the symbol by constituting her a civil as well as an
+ecclesiastical horn.
+
+Odoacer, in A.D. 476, overthrew the old empire of the West and
+established the kingdom of the Heruli in Italy. Seventeen years later it
+was subverted by Theodoric, who established the kingdom of the
+Ostrogoths, which continued sixty years; then it, in turn, was
+overthrown by Belisarius, but was soon succeeded by the Lombards. The
+Lombard kingdom was subverted by Pepin and Charlemagne, who, as
+champions of the church, gave a large part of their dominions to the See
+of Rome and thus favored the Papacy with her first temporal power. Thus
+were the kingdoms of the Heruli, Ostrogoths, and Lombards plucked up by
+the roots upon the very territory occupied first by the Papacy as a
+temporal power, and as if to give it room.
+
+The careful student of Daniel 7 will notice immediately the striking
+similarity between the politico-religious system symbolized by the
+little horn and the leopard beast of Revelation 13 under consideration.
+The following parallels between them prove their identity:
+
+"1. The little horn was a blasphemous power: 'He shall speak great words
+against the Most High.' Dan. 7:25. The leopard beast of Rev. 13:6 does
+the same: 'He opened his mouth in blasphemy against God.'
+
+"2. The little horn made war with the saints, and prevailed against
+them. Dan. 7:21. This beast also, Rev. 13:7, makes war with the saints,
+and overcomes them.
+
+"3. The little horn had a mouth speaking great things. Dan. 7:8, 20. And
+of this beast we read, Rev. 13:5: 'And there was given unto him a mouth
+speaking great things and blasphemies.'
+
+"4. The little horn rose on the cessation of the Pagan form of the Roman
+empire. This beast rises at the same time; for the dragon, Pagan Rome,
+gives him his power, his seat, and great authority.
+
+"5. Power was given to the little horn to continue for a time, times,
+and the dividing of time, or twelve hundred and sixty years. Dan. 7:25.
+To this beast also power was given for forty and two months, or twelve
+hundred and sixty years. Rev. 13:5.
+
+"6. At the end of the twelve hundred and sixty years the universal
+dominion of the little horn was to begin to decline, being consumed and
+destroyed unto the end. Dan. 7:26. This beast, also, Rev. 13:10, was to
+be led into captivity and 'killed with the sword.'"
+
+These points prove identity. To quote the words of a certain expositor:
+"When we have in prophecy two symbols ... representing powers that come
+upon the stage of action at the _same time_, occupy the _same
+territory_, maintain the _same character_, do the _same work_, exist the
+_same length of time_, and meet the same _fate_, those symbols represent
+the same _identical power_." To this all must agree. Hence we have in
+the vision before us a description of Papal Rome in her two-fold
+character as a temporal and a religious power. The wounding and healing
+of the head of the beast will be explained in chapter XVII.
+
+How the same heads and horns can serve both the dragon and the leopard
+beast will be better understood later. For the present it will be
+sufficient to state that it is because they are the same beast in
+reality, being clothed, in its later form, in a Christian garb, instead
+of the worn-out garments of infidelity or heathenism possessed by the
+former. This transfer is expressed in the following words: "And the
+dragon gave him his power, and his seat, and great authority." Verse 2.
+This beast, then, succeeded to the dominion held by the dragon. It was
+like an old, established firm retiring and giving its standing and
+credit and well-earned reputation to a new partnership, to conduct a
+similar business.
+
+While this beast, as before observed, represents the developed religious
+and political power of the Papacy combined, still the actions ascribed
+to it show plainly that it is in its character as an _ecclesiastical_
+beast that its terrible features are here delineated. No one would
+suppose that a mere political power would set itself up as an object to
+be worshiped, exalting itself above the God of heaven, and then single
+out and slaughter the saints for not complying therewith. As far as
+rendering obedience to civil governments is concerned, the Christians of
+all ages have been the most peaceful and obedient servants of all. So we
+shall hereafter refer always to the _beast_ as an ecclesiastical power,
+unless otherwise stated.
+
+This beast all the world admired. "And they worshiped the dragon which
+gave power unto the beast: and they worshiped the beast, saying, Who is
+like unto the beast? who is able to make war with him?" The people
+worshiped the established hierarchy, and they also worshiped the dragon
+from which the beast obtained so much of his power. The expression
+"_worshiped_ the dragon" shows plainly that it is the dragon as a
+religious system that is referred to, and not the old civil empire. How,
+then, could the old heathen worship be perpetuated in the church of Rome
+and form a part of her religious services? By adopting rites and
+ceremonies purely Pagan in their origin. Since I have already stated
+that the beast and the dragon as temporal powers were about the same in
+reality, except the change of sovereignty from the heads to the horns,
+it will now be necessary to show the remarkable similarity in spirit
+that existed between them as religious powers, the one being the
+successor of the other.
+
+1. The high-priest of the Pagan religions was called Pontifex Maximus,
+and he claimed spiritual and temporal authority over the affairs of men.
+The Pope of Rome possesses the same title and makes the same claims, and
+he is clad in the same attire as the Pagan Pontiff.
+
+2. The heathen were accustomed to wear scapulars, medals, and images to
+shield them from the common ills and dangers of life. Romanists wear the
+same and for the same purpose.
+
+3. The Pagans, by an official process called _deification_, frequently
+exalted men who had lived among them to a position worthy of special
+honor and worship. Papists, by a similar process called _canonisation_,
+raise their former men of prominence to the dignity of _saints_ and then
+offer up prayers to them.
+
+The foregoing practises are derived from Paganism; also from Judaism or
+Paganism came their practise of burning incense in public worship, the
+use of holy water, burning wax candles in the daytime, and votive gifts
+and offerings. Other heathen principles are:
+
+4. Adoration of idols and images, a practise expressly forbidden by the
+Mosaic law and unsanctioned by primitive Christianity;
+
+5. Road gods and saints (in Catholic countries);
+
+6. Processions of worshipers and self-whippers (especially in Catholic
+countries);
+
+7. Religious orders of monks and nuns. One who has read of the vestal
+virgins of old will recognize at once where monkery originated.
+
+In the city of Rome there still stands an old heathen temple built by
+Marcus Agrippa and dedicated in the year B.C. 27 to _all the gods_. In
+the year A.D. 610 it was reconsecrated by Pope Boniface IV. to "the
+blessed Virgin and all the saints." From that time until the present day
+Romanists in the same temple have prostrated themselves before _the very
+same images_ and have devoutly emplored them by the same forms of prayer
+and for the very same purposes as did the heathen of old. The only
+difference is, that instead of calling this idol Jupiter, they call it
+Paul; instead of denominating that one Venus, they call it Mary, etc.
+Well has Bowling said: "The scholar, familiar as he is with the classic
+descriptions of ancient mythology, when he directs his attention to the
+ceremonies of Papal worship, can not avoid recognizing their close
+resemblance, if not their absolute identity. The temples of Jupiter,
+Diana, Venus or Apollo, their 'altars smoking with incense,' their boys
+in sacred habits, holding the incense box, and attending upon the
+priests, their holy water at the entrance of the temples, with their
+_aspergilla_, or sprinkling-brushes, their thuribula, or vessels of
+incense, their ever-burning lamps before the statues of their deities,
+are irresistibly brought before his mind, whenever he visits a Roman
+Catholic place of worship, and witnesses precisely the same things."
+History of Romanism, pp. 109, 110.
+
+Having failed in his direct attacks against the Christian church, with
+the accession of Constantine, who established Christianity as the State
+religion, the dragon soon clothed his pernicious principles in a
+Christian garb and made war against the remnant of the woman's seed that
+kept the commandments of God, through the rising hierarchy, under the
+name of Christianity; but his heads and horns being visible, and he
+being unable to control his tongue, his real sentiments crop out, and he
+is easily identified. It is not to be supposed, however, that the beast
+would appear suddenly in full possession of the immense power ascribed
+to him in this chapter. On the contrary, Daniel represents it as a
+_little_ horn at first, whose look finally became "more stout than his
+fellows." Dan. 7:8, 20. Such ecclesiastical power was attained only by
+the process of gradual development. According to the vision his
+universal power was limited to "forty and two months," or twelve hundred
+and sixty years. Since this has reference to the beast as an
+ecclesiastal power, which according to Daniel grew up by degrees, the
+time should be calculated the same as in chapter 11:2, 3--dated from the
+time when the external, visible church was wholly in the hands of the
+profane multitude of Gentiles and the true church crowded into the
+wilderness. The nationalized hierarchy, however, continued to advance to
+greater degrees of power over the nations, until it reached its zenith
+under the pontificate of Gregory VII., A.D. 1073-1080.
+
+The great things and blasphemies spoken by this beast are doubtless
+fulfilled by the prerogatives and rights belonging to God alone which
+this apostate church, especially through her regularly constituted head,
+claims. In fact, the Pope is the real mouth of this beast, the one who
+dictates her laws with great authority. He claims to be the vicar of
+Christ on earth and supreme head of the church, even, as in the case of
+Pope Innocent, denominating himself the one before whom every knee must
+bow, of things in heaven, and things on earth, and things under the
+earth. He claims power over the souls of all men on earth and even after
+their departure from earth. If this is not blasphemy against God, his
+tabernacle, or church, and "them that dwell in heaven," then I am wholly
+unable to imagine what would fulfil the prediction. Among the
+blasphemous titles assumed are these: Lord God the Pope, King of the
+World, Holy Father, King of kings, and Lord of lords, Vicegerent of the
+Son of God. He claims infallibility (which was backed up by the
+Ecumenical council of 1870) and has for ages. Further, he claims power
+to dispense with God's laws, to forgive sins, to release from purgatory,
+to damn, and to save.
+
+All the inhabitants of the earth were to worship him, except those whose
+names were in the book of life. Thank God that even during the dark age
+of Romanism a people existed who were owned by the Lord and who refused
+to render idolatrous worship to this tyrannical beast. For further
+information regarding these medieval Christians, see remarks on chapter
+11:3. But these saints who opposed the Papal assumptions were made the
+object of fearful persecutions, until Rome glutted herself upon the
+blood of millions of God's holy saints. This will be more fully
+described in chapter 17, where this apostate church appears under
+another symbol, "drunken with the blood of the saints, and with the
+blood of the martyrs of Jesus." In all their severe trials, however,
+they were comforted with the knowledge that Justice would not always
+sleep, but that a time would come when her retributive hand would be
+stretched forth to lead into captivity their persecuting enemies and
+break their world-wide reign of tyranny and usurpation. "Here is the
+patience and the faith of the saints." To a number of people God gave
+special foresight of the coming reformation of the sixteenth century, in
+which the universal spiritual supremacy of the Papacy ended. A few of
+the many examples will be profitable.
+
+Says D'Aubigne: "John Huss preached in Bohemia a century before Luther
+preached in Saxony. He seems to have penetrated deeper than his
+predecessors into the essence of Christian truth. He prayed to Christ
+for grace to glory only in his cross, and in the inestimable humiliation
+of his sufferings.... He was, if we may be allowed the expression, the
+John Baptist of the reformation. The flames of his pile kindled a fire
+in the church that cast a brilliant light into the surrounding darkness,
+and whose glimmerings were not to be so readily extinguished. John Huss
+did more: prophetic words issued from the depths of his dungeon. He
+foresaw that a real reformation of the church was at hand. When driven
+out of Prague and compelled to wander through the fields of Bohemia,
+where an immense crowd followed his steps and hung upon his words, he
+had cried out: 'The wicked have begun by preparing a treacherous snare
+for a goose. But if even the goose, which is only a domestic bird, a
+peaceful animal, and whose flight is not very far in the air, has
+nevertheless broken through their toils, other birds, soaring more
+boldly towards the sky, will break through them with still greater
+force. Instead of a feeble goose, the truth will send forth eagles and
+keen-eyed vultures.' This prediction was fulfilled by the reformers.
+
+"When the venerable priest had been summoned by Sigismund's order before
+the Council of Constance, and had been thrown into prison, the chapel of
+Bethlehem, in which he had proclaimed the gospel and the future triumphs
+of Christ, occupied his mind much more than his own defence. One night
+the holy martyr saw in imagination, from the depths of his dungeon, the
+pictures of Christ which he had painted on the walls of his oratory,
+effaced by the Pope and his bishops. This vision distressed him; but on
+the next day he saw many painters occupied in restoring these figures in
+greater number and in brighter colors. As soon as the task was ended,
+the painters, who were surrounded by an immense crowd, exclaimed, 'Now
+let the popes and bishops come! they shall never efface them more!' And
+many people rejoiced in Bethlehem, and I with them, adds John Huss.
+'Busy yourself with your defence rather than with your dreams,' said his
+faithful friend, the Knight of Chlum, to whom he had communicated this
+vision. 'I am no dreamer,' replied Huss, 'but I maintain this for
+certain, that the image of Christ will never be effaced. They have
+wished to destroy it, but it shall be painted afresh in all hearts by
+much better preachers than myself. The nation that loves Christ will
+rejoice at this. And I, awaking from the dead, and rising so to speak,
+from my grave, shall leap with great joy.'" History of the Reformation,
+Book I, Chap. 6.
+
+This bold witness for Christ was burned at the stake July 6, 1415, by
+order of the General Council of Constance. When the fagots were piled up
+around him ready for the torch, he said to the executioner, "You are now
+going to burn a goose [Huss signifying goose in the Bohemian language];
+but in a century you will have a swan whom you can neither roast nor
+boil." Fox's Book of Martyrs. This was fulfilled in Martin Luther.
+
+Henry Institorus, an inquisitor, uttered these remarkable words: "'All
+the world cries out and demands a council, but there is no human power
+that can reform the church by a council. The Most High will find other
+means, which are at present unknown to us, although they may be at our
+very doors, to bring back the church to its pristine condition.' This
+remarkable prophecy, delivered by an inquisitor at the very period of
+Luther's birth, is the best apology for the reformation."
+
+Andrew Proles, provincial of the Augustines, used often to say: "Whence,
+then, proceeds so much darkness and such horrible superstitions? O my
+brethren! Christianity needs a bold and a great reform, and methinks I
+see it already approaching.... I am bent with the weight of years, and
+weak in body, and I have not the learning, the ability, and eloquence,
+that so great an undertaking requires. But God will raise up a hero, who
+by his age, strength, talents, learning, genius and eloquence, shall
+hold the foremost place. He will begin the reformation; he will oppose
+error, and God will give him boldness to resist the mighty ones of the
+earth."
+
+John Hilten censured the most flagrant abuses of the monastic life, and
+the exasperated monks threw him into prison and treated him shamefully.
+"The Franciscan, forgetting his malady and groaning heavily, replied: 'I
+bear your insults calmly for the love of Christ; for I have said nothing
+that can injure the monastic state: I have only censured its most crying
+abuses.' 'But,' continued he (according to what Melancthon records in
+his Apology for the Augsburg Confession of Faith), 'another man will
+rise in the year of our Lord 1516: he will destroy you, and you shall
+not be able to resist him.'"
+
+In 1516 Luther held a public discussion with Feld-kirchen, in which he
+upheld certain doctrines of truth that made a great stir among the
+Romanists. Says D'Aubigne: "The disputation took place in 1516. This was
+Luther's first attack upon the dominion of the sophists and upon the
+Papacy, as he himself characterizes it." And again, "This disputation
+made a great noise, and it has been considered as the beginning of the
+reformation." Book I, Chap. 9. The next year, however, he entered
+publicly upon the actual work of reformation.
+
+Frederick of Saxony, surnamed the Wise, was the most powerful elector of
+the German empire at the period of the reformation. A dream he had and
+related just before the world was startled by the first great act of
+reformation is so striking that I feel justified in repeating it in this
+connection. It was as follows:
+
+"Having gone to bed last night, tired and dispirited, I soon fell asleep
+after saying my prayers, and slept calmly for about two hours and a
+half. I then awoke, and all kinds of thoughts occupied me until
+midnight.... I then fell asleep again, and dreamed the Almighty sent me
+a monk, who was a true son of Paul the apostle. He was accompanied by
+all the saints, in obedience to God's command, to bear him testimony,
+and to assure me that he did not come with any fraudulent design, but
+that all he should do was conformable to the will of God. They asked my
+gracious permission to let him write something on the doors of the
+palace-chapel at Wittemberg, which I conceded through my chancellor.
+Upon this, the monk retired thither and began to write; so large were
+the characters that I could read from Schweinitz what he was writing
+[about 18 miles]. The pen he used was so long that its extremity reached
+as far as Rome, where it pierced the ears of a lion which lay there, and
+shook the triple crown on the Pope's head. All the cardinals and princes
+ran up hastily and endeavored to support it.... I stretched out my arm:
+that moment I awoke with my arm extended, in great alarm and very angry
+with this monk, who could not guide his pen better. I recovered myself a
+little.... It was only a dream. I was still half asleep, and once more
+closed my eyes. The dream came again. The lion, still disturbed by the
+pen, began to roar with all his might, until the whole city of Rome, and
+all the States of the holy empire, ran up to know what was the matter.
+The Pope called upon us to oppose this monk, and addressed himself
+particularly to me, because the friar was living in my dominions. I
+again awoke, repeated the Lord's prayer, entreated God to preserve his
+Holiness, and fell asleep.... I then dreamt that all the princes of the
+empire, and we along with them, hastened to Rome, and endeavored one
+after another to break this pen; but the greater our exertions the
+stronger it became: it crackled as if it had been made of iron: we gave
+it up as hopeless. I then asked the monk (for I was now at Rome, now at
+Wittemberg) where he had got that pen, and how it came to be so strong.
+[In those days they used goosequills for pens.] 'This pen,' replied he,
+'belonged to a Bohemian goose [Huss] a hundred years old. I had it from
+one of my old schoolmasters. It is so strong because no one can take the
+pith out of it, and I am myself quite astonished at it.' On a sudden I
+heard a loud cry; from the monk's long pen had issued a host of other
+pens. I awoke a third time; it was day light." History of the
+Reformation, Book III, Chap. 4.
+
+Frederick related the foregoing to his brother John, the Duke of York,
+on the morning of Oct. 31, 1517, stating that he had dreamed it during
+the previous night. The same day at noon Martin Luther advanced boldly
+to the chapel at Wittemberg and posted upon the door ninety-five theses,
+or propositions, against the Papal doctrine of indulgences. This was his
+public entrance upon the great work of reformation. The importance of
+the Reformation of the Sixteenth Century is incalculable. It gave the
+deathblow to the universal spiritual supremacy of Rome. As we have
+already seen, the Papacy had for centuries held despotic sway over the
+minds and the consciences of men. One potent cause of the Reformation
+was the great Revival of Learning that marked the close of the medieval
+and the beginning of the modern period of history. This great mental
+awakening contrasted sharply with the blind ignorance and superstition
+of the Middle Ages, and caused many men to doubt the Scriptural
+authority of many of the doctrines and ceremonies of the Church of Rome;
+such as invocation of saints, auricular confession, use of images,
+worship of the Virgin Mary, etc.
+
+Scandals and abuses in the Church of Rome also hastened the Reformation.
+During the fifteenth century the morals of that church had sunk to the
+greatest depths of iniquity. The Popes themselves were, in some cases,
+monsters of impurity and iniquity, insomuch that historians are obliged
+to draw the vail over many of their dark deeds.
+
+But the real occasion of the revolt of the northern nations of Europe
+against the jurisdiction of Rome was the controversy regarding
+indulgences. "These in the Catholic church, are remissions, to penitents
+of punishment due for sin, upon the performances of some work of mercy
+or piety, or the payment of a sum of money." When Leo X. was elected to
+the Papal dignity (1513), he found the church in great need of money for
+the building of Saint Peter's and other undertakings, and he had
+recourse to a grant of indulgences to fill the coffers of the church.
+The power of dispensing these indulgences in Saxony in Germany was given
+to a Dominican friar named Tetzel. This fanatic enthusiast entertained
+the most exaggerated opinion of the efficacy of indulgences. In his
+harrangues he uttered such expressions as the following:
+
+"Indulgences are the most precious and the most noble of God's gifts."
+"There is no sin so great that an indulgence can not remit; ... only let
+him pay well, and all will be forgiven him." "Come, and I will give you
+letters, all properly sealed, by which even the sins that you intend to
+commit may be pardoned." "I would not change my privileges for those of
+St. Peter in heaven; for I have saved more souls by my indulgences than
+the apostle by his sermons." "The Lord Omnipotent hath ceased to reign;
+he has resigned all power to the Pope." See D'Aubigne's History of the
+Reformation, Book III, Chap. 1.
+
+Martin Luther was an Augustine monk and a teacher of theology in the
+University of Wittemberg. Before Tetzel appeared in Germany, Luther
+possessed a wide reputation for learning and piety, and he had also
+entertained doubts respecting many of the doctrines of the church.
+During an official visit to Rome in 1510 he was almost overwhelmed with
+sorrow because of the moral corruption there; but while penitentially
+ascending on his knees the sacred stairs of the Lateran, he seemed to
+hear a voice thundering in his soul, "The just shall live by faith!"
+This marked an important epoch in his career.
+
+When Tetzel appeared in Saxony with his indulgences, Luther fearlessly
+opposed him. He drew up ninety-five theses against the infamous traffic
+and nailed them to the door of the church at Wittemberg, and invited all
+scholars to criticise them and point out if they were opposed to the
+doctrine of the Word of God or of the early church Fathers. Here the
+invention of printing proved to be a powerful agency in advancing the
+cause of reformation by scattering copies of these theses everywhere;
+and soon the continent of Europe was in a perfect turmoil of
+controversy. The Pope excommunicated Luther as a heretic. In reply
+Luther burned the Papal bull publicly at Wittemberg. Shortly afterward
+Luther produced his celebrated translation of the Bible in the German
+language. Even a brief history of the entire Reformation would be too
+large for the limits of the present volume, therefore with a few words
+respecting the nature of the work of the Reformation we will pass on to
+another prophetic vision.
+
+The great secret of the early success of the reformers was their appeal
+from the decisions of councils and regulations of men to the Word of
+God. So long as the Word and Spirit of God were allowed their proper
+place as the Governors of God's people, the work was a spiritual
+blessing. But this happy state of affairs did not long continue. Within
+a few years the followers of the reformers were divided into hostile
+sects and began to oppose and persecute each other. Luther denounced
+Zwingle as a heretic, and "the Calvinists would have no dealings with
+the Lutherans." The first Protestant creed was the Augsburg Confession
+(1530). This date marks an important epoch. From this time the people
+began to lose sight of the Word and Spirit of God as their Governors and
+to turn to the disciplines of their sects, which they upheld by every
+means possible. Thus we find Calvin at Geneva consenting to the burning
+of Servetus, because of a difference of religious views; and in England
+the Anglican Protestants waged the most bitter, cruel, and relentless
+war not only against Catholics, but against all Protestants who refused
+to conform to the Established Church. The Protestants placed armies in
+the field and fought for their creeds, as during the Thirty Years' War
+in Germany and the long period of the Hugenot wars in France. The real
+work of the Reformation, the promulgation of so much of the truth of the
+Bible, was an inestimable blessing to the world; but the rise of
+Protestantism (organized sectism) in 1530 introduced another period of
+apostasy as distinct in many of its features as was that of Romanism
+before it. The historian D'Aubigne recognizes an important change at
+this period. He says:
+
+"The first two books of this volume contain the most important epochs of
+the Reformation--the Protest of Spires, and the Confession of
+Augsburg.... I determined on bringing the reformation of Germany and
+German Switzerland to the _decisive epochs of_ 1530 and 1531. The
+history of the Reformation, properly so-called, is then in my opinion
+almost complete in those countries. The work of faith has there attained
+its apogee: that of conferences, of interims, of diplomacy begins....
+The movement of the Sixteenth Century has there made its effort. I said
+from the very first, It is the history of the Reformation and not of
+Protestantism that I am relating." Preface to Vol. V.
+
+ 11. And I beheld another beast coming up out of the earth; and
+ he had two horns like a lamb, and he spake as a dragon.
+
+ 12. And he exerciseth all the power of the first beast before
+ him, and causeth the earth and them which dwell therein to
+ worship the first beast, whose deadly wound was healed.
+
+ 13. And he doeth great wonders, so that he maketh fire come down
+ from heaven on the earth in the sight of men,
+
+ 14. And deceiveth them that dwell on the earth by the means of
+ those miracles which he had power to do in the sight of the
+ beast; saying to them that dwell on the earth, that they should
+ make an image to the beast, which had the wound by a sword, and
+ did live.
+
+ 15. And he had power to give life unto the image of the beast,
+ that the image of the beast should both speak, and cause that as
+ many as would not worship the image of the beast should be
+ killed.
+
+ 16. And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor,
+ free and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in
+ their foreheads:
+
+ 17. And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the
+ mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.
+
+ 18. Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the
+ number of the beast: for it is the number of a man; and his
+ number is Six hundred threescore and six.
+
+The symbolic description of this beast directs us also to a political
+and a religious system rising at the expiration of the twelve hundred
+and sixty years' reign of the first beast, but that he was no such
+terrible beast politically as the one before him is proved by the fact
+that he had but two horns and they _like a lamb_. This beast rose "out
+of the earth"--the Apocalyptic earth, or the territory of the Roman
+empire. The first beast rose out of the sea, which, as before shown,
+signifies the heart of the empire in an agitated state; for the ten
+horns came up through the greatest political convulsions that the page
+of history records. When John beheld the second beast "coming up,"
+however, the empire was in a state of comparative quiet, although fierce
+wars followed afterward. He stands as a symbol of _Protestantism_ in
+Europe; although his power and influence afterwards extended beyond the
+"earth"--the Apocalyptic earth--into "the whole world." Chap. 16:14.
+That this beast came up upon the same territory occupied by the Papacy
+is proved also by the statement that "he exerciseth all the power of the
+first beast before him." It was predicted in a subsequent chapter
+(17:16) that the ten horns, or kingdoms of Europe, after supporting the
+Papacy during the Dark Ages, would later turn against her. This has met
+a remarkable fulfilment under the reign of Protestantism.
+
+The first two nations to turn violently against Popery were England and
+Germany. They have ever since been the chief supporters and defenders of
+Protestantism, and they are doubtless the two kingdoms symbolized by the
+two horns of the beast. While at one time the Pope was a temporal
+sovereign and could, by his political and ecclesiastical power, humble
+with ease the mightiest nations of Europe before him, his authority has
+been wrested from him by degrees, so that to-day not a vestige of his
+temporal power remains, and his anathemas fall harmlessly. The nations
+have asserted their rights as kings. When King Victor Emmanuel entered
+Rome on the twentieth day of September, 1870, the Pope's temporal sun
+set forever, and he does not control even the city in which he
+lives--Rome. He is often referred to as "the prisoner of the Vatican."
+"He that leadeth into captivity shall go into captivity," said the
+prophecy; "he that killeth with the sword must be killed with the
+sword." It was by force of arms that the Popes obtained and maintained
+their temporal power over the nations, and by the force of arms they
+have had their authority torn from them. Religion has been referred to
+as "the basis of government"; for the legislators of any country are to
+a great degree influenced in their deliberations by religious
+sentiments. In all Protestant countries that greatest of Protestant
+principles, religious liberty, is as truly recognized by statute as was
+that infernal principle of the Papacy, religious intolerance, when
+formerly enforced by law. Protestant principles have so far permeated
+the nations of Europe formerly controlled by the Papacy that religious
+toleration is generally granted. In Italy, the headquarters of Popedom,
+where the Catholics are greatly in the majority, religious liberty is
+granted by law. And even Spain, denominated by the Encyclopædia
+Britannica "the most Catholic country in the world," exhibits "a general
+indifferentism to religion," meaning that the fanaticism and intolerance
+of former ages that caused thousands, and perhaps millions, to be slain,
+is rapidly dying out. In the vision before us, however, the special
+actions ascribed to this beast--_speaking_, working miracles, deceiving,
+making an image and imparting life to it, etc., which all belong
+properly to the department of human life--show conclusively that it is
+the character of this beast as an _ecclesiastical power_ that is the
+chief point under consideration. He was not to become such a terrible
+beast politically (for his horns were only _like a lamb_), but "he
+_spake_ as a dragon." As soon as we enter the department to which
+_speaking_ by analogy refers us, we find this beast to be a great
+religious power; and it is in this character alone that he is dilineated
+in the remainder of the chapter. That the description of a religious
+system is the main burden of this symbol, is shown also by the fact that
+it is in every case referred to in subsequent chapters as the "false
+prophet." Chap. 16:13; 19:20; 20:10. Therefore every reference I make to
+this second beast hereafter should be understood as signifying the
+religious system of Protestantism, unless otherwise stated.
+
+That Protestantism in its many forms can be properly represented by a
+single symbol--a beast or false prophet--may seem a little strange at
+first; but when we come to consider next the making of an image to the
+beast, it will be seen that the Protestant sects, from God's standpoint
+of viewing, are all alike in character, as were the multitudinous forms
+of heathen worship represented under the single symbol of the dragon.
+Hence only one beast, or the making of one image, was necessary to stand
+as representative of the entire number. It will be noticed by the reader
+that from verse 12 to the close of the chapter the term _beast_
+signifies the first beast, or the Papacy, and that the second beast, or
+Protestantism, is designated by the pronoun _he_.
+
+_Image_ is defined to be "an imitation, representation, similitude of
+any person or thing; a copy, a likeness, an effigy." The second beast,
+then, is to manufacture something in _imitation_ of the first beast. If
+any doubt exists as to which phase of the first beast, political or
+ecclesiastical, is copied, it can be settled by considering what is said
+of the image made from the original. "The image of the beast
+should--_speak_." This directs us by analogy, as heretofore explained,
+to the department of religious affairs; hence the second beast forms an
+_ecclesiastical organization_ in imitation of the hierarchy of Rome. At
+this juncture the Protestant will doubtless exclaim, "Oh, our churches
+are nothing like the church of Rome!" But consider a little in the light
+of truth. God's Word teaches that they bear the close relationship of
+_mother_ and her _daughters_ (Rev. 17:5), and by the help of the Lord we
+shall point out a similarity of character in this and subsequent
+chapters. The symbol of the church of Rome in chapter 17 is that of a
+corrupt _prostitute_, while the symbol of Protestantism is that of her
+_harlot daughters_. The Roman church is a humanly organized institution
+governed by a set of fallible men, their claims of infallibility to the
+contrary notwithstanding. Protestant sects, likewise, are all human
+organizations (even though they may sometimes deny it), and are governed
+by a man or a conference of men. The Roman Catholic church makes and
+prescribes the theology that her members believe. Protestant churches,
+also, make their own disciplines and prescribe rules of faith and
+practise. The Word of God, inspired by his Spirit, could not be enforced
+in Romanism without destroying it; for its main spirit is Antichrist.
+So, too, the whole Word in Protestantism would soon annihilate her
+God-dishonoring sects; for they are all contrary to its plain teachings,
+which condemn divisions and enjoin perfect unity and oneness upon the
+redeemed of the Lord. What is said concerning the image of the beast
+applies to sectarianism as a whole and the human organization of all her
+so-called churches, regardless of the differences that exist between
+them as individual institutions; for they may differ as widely as the
+various systems of heathen religions symbolized by the dragon, yet they
+can be represented by the single symbol of an image to the first beast,
+because they are built upon the same general principles--are but human
+organizations, falsely called churches of Christ, and are all contrary
+to the Scriptures.
+
+Imparting life to the image of the beast simply signifies the complete
+organization of the ecclesiastical institutions so that they are capable
+of self-government and their decrees possess authority. Every living
+body is animated by a spirit. The sectarian spirit that animates the
+Methodist body will lead people into that body, etc.; but the one Spirit
+of God will, if permitted, baptize us all into the one body of Christ,
+where we can all "drink into one Spirit." 1 Cor. 12:13. "And he spake as
+a dragon" signifies the great authority by which his laws are enacted
+and enforced upon the people.
+
+"And he doeth great wonders, so that he maketh fire come down from
+heaven on the earth in the sight of men, and deceiveth them that dwell
+on the earth by the means of those miracles which he had power to do in
+the sight of the beast; saying to them that dwell on the earth, that
+they should make an image to the beast." Fire from heaven upon Elijah's
+sacrifice was the attestation of God to his divine mission. Bringing
+down fire from heaven, then, symbolically describes the claims of this
+beast to being a true prophet of the Lord.
+
+At this point we must make a distinction which, being true in the facts
+of history, must necessarily be intended in the symbolic representation.
+According to the symbols of the preceding chapter the woman, or true
+church, "fled into the wilderness, where she hath a place prepared of
+God, that they should feed her there a thousand two hundred and
+threescore days." The time-prophecy is the same and covers the same
+period as the reign of the Papal beast; therefore just as an important
+change in the Papacy occured at the expiration of the prophetic period,
+so also we must expect a radical change with respect to the true church:
+it must no longer be completely obscured in the wilderness.
+
+As the Reformation, and Protestantism as a religion, was the means of
+ending Rome's universal spiritual supremacy, so also the same movement
+must be regarded as possessing sufficient light and truth to again bring
+into prominence the work of the Spirit and the true people of God. "Fire
+from heaven" may therefore be regarded as describing the divine work of
+reformation, the unfolding of truth accompanied by the saving power of
+God. Such spiritual work has accompanied the origin of various religious
+movements during the Protestant era.
+
+The general description of the two-horned beast, however, brings into
+prominence an evil characteristic--the disposition to lead people into
+deception by making an image to the beast and then worshiping it. The
+evil does not inhere in the work of bringing down "fire from heaven,"
+but in image-making and image-worship, for which the Spiritual work
+simply furnished an occasion. The Spiritual work of reformation is
+therefore to be distinguished from the later work of creed- and
+sect-making. And since the beast takes advantage of Spirit
+manifestations, in order to deceive men, he becomes a sort of apostate
+and is denominated "the _false prophet_." See Chap. 16:14; 19:20.
+
+Ecclesiastically considered, the two-horned beast stands as the symbol
+of the religious system of Protestantism as a whole--a peculiar
+combination of truth and error, of good and bad, of "fire from heaven"
+and false, miracle-working power (chap. 16:14); while the "image to the
+beast" signifies the sectarian institution--the man-made,
+man-controlled, unscriptural sect machinery manufactured in imitation of
+the Papal original. To exalt such earth-born churches and lead people to
+adore and worship them is but a species of idolatry and the rankest
+deception. It is a sad fact that multitudes of people in Protestantism
+are more devoted to their particular church than they are to the Lord
+Jesus Christ. They can witness the open rejection of God's precious Word
+and the vilest profanation of his holy name, without uttering a word of
+protest; but let anyone say a word against _their church_, and instantly
+they are aroused to the highest pitch of excitement--beast-worshipers!
+
+The Protestant era has witnessed many wonderful reformations in which
+the true fire of God fell upon waiting souls, but this initial work of
+the Spirit has in each case been employed as an excuse for taking the
+next step--making an image. Thousands of honest souls, lacking better
+light, have been induced to submit to such human organization. But the
+truly saved have always loved and adored their Lord more than the human
+church to which they were attached, therefore they should not be
+regarded as beast-worshipers. They are the ones whom the Lord
+denominates his people when the voice is heard calling them out of
+Babylon. Chap. 18:4.
+
+The "mark of the beast" next claims our attention. The beast referred to
+is the Papacy. How did the Papacy mark its subjects? Undoubtedly, by the
+false spirit which animated that organization, branding them all with
+its delusive doctrines and errors. In a previous chapter the servants of
+God were represented as receiving the seal of God in their foreheads.
+This was shown to signify the pure Word and doctrines of the Bible being
+planted within them by the Holy Spirit. In making the sect image in
+imitation of the Papal original, then, the principle of marking subjects
+has also been copied. The members of every sect organization are
+indelibly marked. You can not become one of them without solemnly
+agreeing to believe the doctrines taught in their discipline and
+accepting the government of their man-made institutions. Subscribing to
+the rules of faith and practise that originated with the sect shows how
+its members worship the image. They are also said to worship the first
+beast, the original of the image. How is this fulfilled? In the same
+manner that the worshipers of the first beast worshiped the dragon that
+preceded it; namely, by accepting and believing false principles of
+faith that originated in the system immediately preceding. Protestant
+sects have transferred many of the false doctrines of Romanism to their
+own creeds, hence they worship the first beast just as truly as the
+Papists worshiped the dragon by accepting heathenish principles. The
+greatest principle of false doctrine that originated with Catholicism,
+and one that has been transferred to _every Protestant sect_, is, that a
+human organization is necessary to complete the church of Christ on
+earth. The church of Rome has an earthly head and a human government;
+and Protestants, also, firmly believe the unscriptural doctrine that
+they must bow to an organization of men and thus be under a visible
+headship: they receive the mark of the beast. Many sects have also
+copied other Popish doctrines, such as infant baptism, the destruction
+of all outside of the pales of the church (?), infantile damnation,
+sprinkling, and other things too numerous to mention. Thus, they worship
+the first beast as well as his image.
+
+They also receive the "name of the beast." Here again "beast" refers to
+the Papacy. The Papal beast was represented as being full of the names
+of blasphemy, which blasphemy was shown to signify the usurpation of
+prerogatives and rights belonging to God alone. The greatest
+ecclesiastical usurpation reached by the Romish hierarchy was that of
+claiming to be the head of the church and the right to prescribe and
+enforce their doctrines, naming their organization the _Holy Catholic
+Church_. In making their sect organizations in imitation, Protestants,
+as above stated, have transferred the same principle and make the same
+blasphemous claim of a right to make disciplines to govern God's people,
+and then name their sect machinery a _church_ of God. The name may be
+Methodist, Baptist, Mennonite, Episcopalian, or what not, it is only a
+_beast name_, yet a name that you must accept if you desire to become
+one of them.
+
+They not only receive the name of the beast, but also receive the
+"number of his name." It will be necessary first to explain what is
+meant by the number of a name. "The modern system of notation by the
+nine digits and the cipher, was not introduced until the tenth century,
+but on account of its superior excellence, has since superseded every
+other. Previous to this great discovery, the letters of the alphabet
+were used to denote numbers, each letter having the power of a _number_
+as well as a _sound_. The same system is still retained among us for
+certain purposes. The Roman letters I. V. X. L. C. D. M., have each the
+power of expressing a number. This, however, was the common and the best
+mode of notation that the ancients possessed." The number of a name,
+therefore, was merely the number denoted by the several letters of that
+name.
+
+The number of the name of the beast--the first beast--is said to be the
+number of a _man_. When we enter the Romish hierarchy and search for a
+man the number of whose name will be six hundred and sixty-six, where
+could we go more appropriately than to the Pope himself, its authorized
+head? The Scriptures point him out particularly as the "_man_ of sin,"
+"the son of perdition." 2 Thes. 2:3, 4. Has the Pope of Rome a name the
+letters of which, used as numerals, make six hundred and sixty-six? Yes.
+He wears in jeweled letters upon his miter the following blasphemous
+inscription: _Vicarius Filii Dei_--Vicar of the Son of God. Taking out
+of this name all the letters that the Latins used as numerals, we have
+just six hundred and sixty-six. U and V were both formerly used to
+denote five.
+
+ V ..... 5 F ..... 0
+ I ..... 1 I ..... 1
+ C ... 100 L .... 50
+ A ..... 0 I ..... 1
+ R ..... 0 I ..... 1
+ I ..... 1 D ... 500
+ U ..... 5 E ..... 0
+ S ..... 0 I ..... 1
+ ---
+ 666
+
+In some manner the worshipers of Protestant images also receive the
+number of this name--six hundred and sixty-six. The name is that of
+"Vicar of the Son of God." In all Protestantism (see remarks on chapter
+11:7, 8) the true Vicars of Christ on earth--the Word and Spirit of
+God--have been set aside, and conferences of men have taken their places
+in all the official acts relative to spiritual affairs. Hence the number
+of the name applies to them as well. What that number specially
+symbolizes I do not know, unless it is, as has been explained by
+others--_division_. While the policy of Romanism has been that of unity,
+still the false claims made by one individual can be as well made by
+another, and by many, which has been the case, as just explained;
+therefore it would not be improper at all to make the Pope's number a
+symbol of the whole, since his system has been so largely copied by the
+rest. The whole structure of sectarianism is built on the principle of
+division, and it so happens that there is always enough left to divide
+again. So this special number is perhaps the symbol of endless division,
+signifying the great number of human organizations claiming to be
+churches of Christ. The church of God, however, is built on the
+principal of unity; division is destruction to its true nature and life,
+for it is Christ's body.
+
+It is further said that "no man might buy or sell, save he that had the
+mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name." To "buy or
+sell" is to engage in the ordinary pursuits of life and have intercourse
+with human society. Applying this as a symbol to the analagous
+department of the church, we have the fact set forth that those without
+the special mark have no more recognized standing in the so-called
+churches than men that are not allowed to buy or sell have in a
+community. But _selling_, as a symbol, would specially indicate the
+dealing out of truth, or the preaching of the gospel. A Holy Ghost
+minister in the clear light of heaven's truth, independent of all the
+creeds of Babylon, will not be allowed the privilege of laboring freely
+among sectarians, after the truth for which he stands becomes well
+known. And if he holds meetings in the community, the members of the
+sects are often warned by their leaders against "buying"--receiving--it
+from the Holy Ghost minister, because of his not having the mark or name
+of the beast. Their ministers are specially marked, for they come out of
+their colleges and theological seminaries with the stamp of their
+respective doctrines upon them and a license from the sect to enter its
+ministry; and those not thus marked or designated have no place among
+them. This may also explain the manner in which the beast causes those
+who will not worship the image to be killed--an analagous killing;
+namely, an ecclesiastical cutting-off, or excommunication, as explained
+in previous chapters.[9]
+
+[Footnote 9: The early history of Protestantism shows that at that time
+the principle of religious intolerance brought over from Romanism
+manifested itself in the actual putting to death of numerous dissenters.
+For example see pp. 252, 291-294 of the present work. It is possible
+that the persecuting principle ascribed to the two-horned beast may
+include both the literal and the ecclesiastical cutting-off, reference
+being made directly to the intolerant spirit.]
+
+The facts just stated are well illustrated by the following
+circumstances. A few years ago a brother in the ministry went into a
+certain town to find a place to conduct a series of holiness meetings.
+He was directed by a Presbyterian lady to their pastor, who, she said,
+was a believer in the doctrine of holiness. When he called on the
+minister and made known his errand, the first question asked him was
+this, "Are you a member of the Presbyterian church?" The brother
+answered in the negative. He did not have the _name of the beast_. The
+next question that greeted him was this, "Do you believe the Westminster
+Confession of Faith to be orthodox?" He answered, "No, sir." He did not
+have the _mark of the beast_. The last question asked was, "Do you
+belong to any of the various orthodox Protestant denominations?" The
+brother said, "No." He did not have the _number of his name_. The answer
+was, "You can not have our house."
+
+While on a missionary trip in the Near East, the writer, in company with
+another brother, attended a Seventh-Day Adventist service in Bucharest,
+Roumania. After the sermon another brother requested that we be given
+the opportunity to speak a little, but the request was absolutely
+refused. It was explained that we would say nothing against them or
+their work but only speak about salvation; but we were not permitted
+even to testify in a few words. The difficulty was that we did not have
+either the "mark of the beast" or its "name."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+ And I looked, and, lo, a Lamb stood on the mount Sion, and with
+ him an hundred forty and four thousand, having his Father's name
+ written in their foreheads.
+
+ 2. And I heard a voice from heaven, as the voice of many waters,
+ and as the voice of a great thunder: and I heard the voice of
+ harpers harping with their harps:
+
+ 3. And they sung as it were a new song before the throne, and
+ before the four beasts, and the elders: and no man could learn
+ that song but the hundred and forty and four thousand, which
+ were redeemed from the earth.
+
+ 4. These are they which were not defiled with women; for they
+ are virgins. These are they which follow the Lamb whithersoever
+ he goeth. These were redeemed from among men, being the
+ firstfruits unto God and to the Lamb.
+
+ 5. And in their mouth was found no guile: for they are without
+ fault before the throne of God.
+
+There is no difficulty in identifying this company on Mount Sion as the
+true people of God in marked contrast with the worshipers of all corrupt
+and false religion. As to the chronology of the event, it is evident
+that we have here a continuation of the same series of prophecy
+beginning with the apostolic period in chapter XII, describing
+alternately the true church and the false church.
+
+At the beginning of this series the true church, symbolized by the
+star-crowned woman, fled into the wilderness and was there lost to view;
+while the leopard beast and the two-horned beast of chapter XIII,
+symbolizing the two leading forms of organized Christianity, were
+brought into prominent view. It is therefore fitting that the true
+church should again appear and be given her proper position and work in
+the world before the end of all earthly things.
+
+That the company here brought to view represents the true church is
+shown by its agreement with the church of God before the apostasy began.
+In the seventh chapter we have seen that before the political calamities
+befell the Western Roman Empire the work of sealing God's servants was
+accomplished, twelve thousand from each of the twelve tribes of Israel
+being sealed, thus representing symbolically the fact that God's church,
+comprising the true Israel, was perfect and complete, no part being
+omitted. In the chapter under consideration we have this divine sealing
+process again after the apostasy, and once more the definite number
+144,000 occurs, showing that the church before the end is to be perfect
+and complete.
+
+The contrast of this company with the ecclesiastical powers in the
+preceding chapter proclaims in an unmistakeable manner the fact that we
+have here described a true reformation and work of God before the end of
+time. In the morning-time of the dispensation the redeemed of earth were
+represented as singing praises to Christ; so also the company here
+brought to view unite in singing a song which only the redeemed can
+know. This company is on Mount Sion, not in the darkness of the
+wilderness, they are with the Lamb, not wandering after the beast; they
+are not even following the beast that was "like a lamb," but they are
+with the true Lamb, the Savior of the world; they have the "Father's
+name written in their foreheads," not the mark or the name of the beast.
+It is said of them that "these are they which were not defiled with
+women, for they are virgins." Fornication and adultery, as will be
+explained later, is a symbol of spiritual idolatry; and the chastity of
+this redeemed company shows that they were free from the abominations of
+the apostasy. They "follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth." Their names
+are in the book of life, and they do not worship the beast. Chap. 13:8.
+
+Here, then, we have a symbol of the church of God in the latter days
+standing distinct from the great apostasy.
+
+ 6. And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having
+ the everlasting gospel to preach unto them that dwell on the
+ earth, and to every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people,
+
+ 7. Saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him;
+ for the hour of his judgment is come: and worship him that made
+ heaven, and earth, and the sea, and the fountains of waters.
+
+ 8. And there followed another angel, saying, Babylon is fallen,
+ is fallen, that great city, because she made all nations drink
+ of the wine of the wrath of her fornication.
+
+ 9. And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice,
+ If any man worship the beast and his image, and receive his mark
+ in his forehead, or in his hand,
+
+ 10. The same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which
+ is poured out without mixture into the cup of his indignation;
+ and he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the
+ presence of the holy angels, and in the presence of the Lamb:
+
+ 11. And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and
+ ever: and they have no rest day nor night, who worship the beast
+ and his image, and whosoever receiveth the mark of his name.
+
+ 12. Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep
+ the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.
+
+ 13. And I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, Write,
+ Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth: Yea,
+ saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labors; and
+ their works do follow them.
+
+Another phase of the last reformation is here brought to view--its
+communicative genius. It not only stands clear from the apostasy, but it
+sounds the warnings of God and proclaims his message. The first
+messenger had a very important message to deliver, even "the everlasting
+gospel." His message was not limited to the inhabitants of "the
+earth"--the Apocalyptic earth--only, but included "every nation, and
+kindred, and tongue, and people," showing that it was of universal
+importance. It was not a new gospel, but the everlasting gospel, the
+same gospel preached before the long period of apostasy. There is one
+phase different, however, and that is that the _nearness_ of the second
+coming of Christ is a leading feature; the messenger with loud voice
+warns the people to prepare for the awful judgment just at hand by
+turning to "worship him that made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and
+the fountains of waters." The apostle Paul cautioned the Thessalonian
+brethren not to entertain the idea that the advent of Christ was then
+near at hand, for it could not come until after the great period of
+apostasy that he predicted; but here is a messenger now claiming that
+the "_hour of his judgment is come_"--an event just at hand. He carries
+his special message to all people; for Jesus declared, "This gospel of
+the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all
+nations; and _then shall the end come_." Matt. 24:14. This represents
+the restoration of gospel truth in the reformation that was begun about
+the year A.D. 1880 and that is now being carried to all nations by a
+holy ministry.
+
+The nature of this restoration work is clearly shown. Its leading
+feature is its missionary character, the proclamation of the pure gospel
+to "every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people." Since the days
+of the apostles the whole gospel has not been boldly declared and
+carried forward with burning missionary zeal. Romanism and Protestantism
+have conducted their missionary work and, according to chap. 16:14,
+their sphere of influence will extend throughout "the whole world"; but
+here is clearly set forth the fact that God has authorized another
+universal message and world-wide work wholly distinguished from all
+others. The contrast between the worshipers of the beast and his image
+and those composing the redeemed company on Mount Sion is so clear, also
+the nature of the work done by each, that we can not possibly identify
+them as being one.
+
+This work of conducting a world-wide missionary enterprise may appear to
+be a gigantic task, but the seeming impossibility vanishes when we
+consider the fact (to be more fully developed hereafter) that God calls
+into this service all his people who are yet under the sectarian yoke.
+With this great host already dispersed over the world, the work of
+making known this last message can and will be accomplished.
+
+The positive statement that the _hour_ of his judgment is come shows
+that the end is exceedingly near; hence the second and third angels must
+follow the first in the closest proximity possible in order to introduce
+their messages before the wrath of God is poured out upon apostate
+Christendom. The time is so short that these three messengers can not
+possibly refer to three distinct reformations in the world; hence they
+must signify three important phases in the one last reformation that
+carries the gospel to all nations in the short period of an "hour,"
+which time also includes the final judgment.
+
+A careful study of these three messages will show that they are
+inseparably connected. The second cry was against Babylon, that she had
+fallen. Rev. 18:1, 2 proves this fall of Babylon to be a moral one--a
+giving away to ungodliness, iniquity and all manner of deception.
+According to chapter 16:19 the great city of Babylon is composed of
+three parts, being a confederation of the dragon[10] (heathenism), the
+beast (Catholicism), and the false prophet (Protestantism). Chap. 16:13,
+14. It is evidently to this latter division of Babylon that this second
+message applies; for Paganism was always a false religion, and
+Catholicism was always a corrupt one, during whose reign the church of
+God, as already shown, was separate. Protestantism, then, was the only
+part of the great city that could fall morally or spiritually. During
+the space of three hundred and fifty years, from the formation of the
+first Protestant creed, she held reign and authority over the people of
+God, who were scattered among her hundreds of opposing sects.
+
+[Footnote 10: That the dragon should be a part of great Babylon seems at
+first improbable; but in this statement reference is made, not to the
+dragon in his original, or Pagan, state, but to the form in which he is
+manifesting himself in these last days to deceive the nations, working
+in conjunction with apostate Christendom. This phase of the dragon power
+which brings him into harmony with, and, in reality, a part of, modern
+Babylon, will be more clearly understood when we come to consider the
+three unclean spirits that come out of the mouth of the dragon, the
+beast, and the false prophet (chap. 16:13, 14), and the release of the
+dragon in chapter 20:7-9.]
+
+In this condition the faithful children of God, although bearing the
+mark and name of the beast, longed for restoration of the divine,
+primitive standard; but in the cloudy atmosphere of that period they
+could not clearly discern the whole truth. Later, when the full tidings
+of the everlasting gospel came, there came also a revelation that
+Babylon is fallen and that God is calling his people out of confusion
+just before the end of time.
+
+I call to witness every child of God who has been with the present
+reformation from its beginning, if there were not three special phases
+of the development of the truth, as follows: 1. A wonderful revival of
+spirituality among a few of God's chosen ones, caused by the
+"everlasting gospel" being revealed to them as never before. 2. The
+knowledge of the truth and deep experience thus obtained prepared the
+way for the next step, which was the discovery that the "churches" were
+a part of the great Babylon of Revelation and were in a fallen
+condition, "a hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of every unclean and
+hateful bird." Chap. 18:2, 3. Hence the cry went up, "Babylon is fallen,
+is fallen." 3. Then followed immediately the message to God's people to
+"flee out of the midst of Babylon and deliver every man his soul,"
+warning them that no one could any longer bear the mark of the beast or
+worship his image without forfeiting eternal salvation and that the
+fearful judgments of heaven would soon descend upon every one who
+refused to obey the message and to walk in the light. The last two
+phases, which apply to Babylon, are the same and in the same order as
+the description given in chapter 18:1-4. First, an angel from heaven
+cries mightily with a strong voice, "Babylon the great is fallen, is
+fallen"; and then "_another voice_" from heaven says, "COME OUT OF HER,
+MY PEOPLE." The three successive phases of the message are now all
+combined in one, and God is gathering his holy remnant "out of all
+places where they have been scattered in the cloudy and dark day" (Ezek.
+34:12) into the one body of Jesus Christ. Halleluiah! John, also, saw
+this glorious result of the three messages--"And I saw as it were a sea
+of glass mingled with fire: and them that had gotten the victory over
+the beast, and over his image, and over his mark, and over the number of
+his name, stand on the sea of glass, having the harps of God. And they
+sung the song of Moses the servant of God [a song of deliverance], and
+the song of the Lamb [the song of redemption], saying, Great and
+marvelous are thy works, Lord God Almighty; just and true are thy ways,
+thou king of saints." Chap. 15:2, 3. Let all the people of God rejoice!
+
+ "Hail the day so long expected,
+ Hail the year of full release;
+ Zion's walls are now erected,
+ And the watchmen publish peace.
+
+ "Now on Shiloh's wide dominion,
+ Hear the trumpets loudly roar:
+ Babylon's fallen, is fallen, is fallen,
+ Babylon's fallen to rise no more."
+
+Those of the Lord's people who through lack of sufficient light were
+yoked up with unbelievers in Protestantism, labored faithfully to
+upbuild the very sectarian institutions that God was against and that
+were destined to be destroyed, though they themselves were saved as by
+fire; but from the time this reformation began the redeemed die in the
+triumphs of a living faith, and their labors in upbuilding the true
+cause and kingdom of God are still blessed and fruitful, being
+perpetuated in the works that follow them.
+
+"Here is the patience of the saints; here are they that keep the
+commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus." As before mentioned, God's
+people during the reign of Romanism expected her universal supremacy to
+come to an end, and their patience was greatly exercised in waiting for
+the appointed time to arrive. It came with a great spiritual
+reformation. Then followed another period of apostasy, during which time
+God's people again looked forward to something better in the future.
+Many remarkable predictions of this present holiness reformation were
+uttered by some of the most spiritual saints during the Protestant era,
+and I can not refrain from mentioning a few of them in this connection.
+
+D'Aubigne: "The nineteenth century is called to resume the work which
+the sixteenth century was unable to accomplish." History of the
+Reformation, Book XV, Chap. 1.
+
+Fletcher: "Only He will come with more mercy, and will increase the
+light that shall be at eventide, according to his promise in Zech. 14:7.
+I should rather think that the visions are not yet plainly disclosed;
+and that the day and hour in which the Lord will begin to make bare his
+arm openly are still concealed from us. Oh, when will the communion of
+saints be complete? Lord, hasten the time; and let me have a place among
+them that love thee, and love one another in sincerity." This is an
+extract from a letter written by John Fletcher to Mr. Wesley, dated
+London, May 26, 1757, as given in Joseph Benson's life of Fletcher, pp.
+39, 40.
+
+D'Aubigne again: "In every age it has been seen how great is the
+strength of an idea to penetrate the masses, to stir nations, and to
+hurry them, if required, by thousands to the battle-field and to death.
+But if so great be the strength of a human idea, what power must not a
+heaven-descended idea possess, when God opens to it the gates of the
+heart! The world has not often seen so much power at work; it was seen,
+however, in the early days of Christianity, and in the time of the
+Reformation; and _it will be seen in future_ ages." Book VI, Chap. 12.
+
+"It has been said that the three last centuries, the sixteenth, the
+seventeenth, and the eighteenth, may be conceived as an immense battle
+of three days' duration. We willingly adopt this beautiful
+comparison.... The first day was the battle of God, the second the
+battle of the priest, the third the battle of reason. What will be the
+fourth? In our opinion, the confused strife, the deadly contest of all
+these powers together, to _end in the victory of Him to whom triumph
+belongs_." Book XI, Chap. 9.
+
+Lorenzo Dow, comment on Rev. 14:6-11; 18:1-5: "The angel, or
+extraordinary messenger, with his assistants, proclaiming the fall of
+Babylon will be known in his time. Also the one warning the people of
+God to come out of Babylon literally, spiritually, and practically, will
+be known also, and such other threatening for the omission of compliance
+is not to be found in all the Bible." Dow's Works, p. 533.
+
+The following extracts are from an old book written about 1812 by
+Theophilus R. Gates and entitled "Truth Advocated." Through the kindness
+of a sister living in Allegan County, Michigan, the writer was enabled
+to secure the following from the only copy of this book known to be in
+existence--she having borrowed it of her neighbor, a relative of its
+author.
+
+On Rev. 14:11: "I would here gladly drop the subject, lest I give
+offense; but duty compels me to remark, what can not be denied, that an
+inordinate attachment to certain systems and forms of religion, has
+occasioned all the strifes, animosities, and persecutions, that have so
+long agitated the Christian world; and if God be just, every one must
+drink of the cup of his indignation, according to his offense. The beast
+and his image, as it exists in Protestant countries, seems in this place
+particularly meant; and our own land is full of the number of his name.
+That such a testimony will one day go forth we must believe, or else St.
+John saw that which will never be: and the testimony will as certainly
+be received; for a company in the next chapter are to be seen that had
+gotten the victory over the beast, his image, his mark, and the number
+of his name. It is also equally true that as yet it has never gone
+forth; and that at the time, great afflictions or suffering of some kind
+will be undergone to exercise the patience of the saints.... It is at
+this very time, no doubt, that the three unclean spirits, like frogs,
+come out of the mouth of the dragon, the beast, and the false prophet;
+spirits of devils working miracles, which go forth unto the kings of the
+earth, and of the whole world, to gather them to the great battle of the
+great day of God Almighty. The greatest possible efforts, indeed will
+now be made by all the sectarians to keep up their existence ... nor is
+it any wonder that hireling ministers and system worshipers, Demetrius
+like, should be stirred up and raise no small stir about the way; for it
+is evident, not only their craft is in danger of being set at naught by
+this testimony, but also the great Diana of systems and forms of
+religion to be despised, and their magnificence destroyed, whom now
+almost the whole Christian world worshipeth." Pp. 281-283.
+
+"And now commences an era of light and suffering, when the corrupt
+churches (with the kings of the earth and great men united with them)
+being about to be wholly brought down, make one general muster against
+Christ and his true worshipers. These things are clear to me as a ray of
+light; and whoever lives at this time will see as great opposition and
+spite to the true way of righteousness then set forth from sectarians
+and professors generally, as there was from the Jews towards Christ and
+his testimony: and also, like the Jews, at the very time they oppose the
+true way of the Lord with all their might, they will no doubt make the
+greatest possible show of religion, will think they are the true church,
+yea will have a zeal for God, carrying on religion with great success,
+forming societies, sending missionaries among the heathen, etc., etc.
+That such an event will take place is very clear." Pp. 286-288.
+
+"This happy period I never expect to see: but known unto the Lord only
+are all things. I know that such a time will be; for we are assured by
+the angel, these are the true sayings of God: and I also believe that it
+will take place _within two centuries_ from this time. But oh! how
+corrupt doth the world now appear to me.... Help me, O Lord, I pray
+thee, to do thy will.
+
+"Whenever any body of people come into notice, establish their rules and
+institutions, and become a respectable sect, they are the people of God
+then only in name; they cease to have the nature any longer; and whoever
+unites himself to the same, constitutes himself one of the beast's
+party, and so far as his influence extends, he helps to establish the
+kingdom of Antichrist in the earth. This is clear from the prophecies of
+the Revelation, and it will answer no purpose to take offense when the
+truth is spoken. These things will, moreover, sooner or later be
+declared with great plainness by some one; and then will the man of sin
+put forth all his strength; then will persecution come, and the beast
+muster his armies to defend himself and to destroy the assailants, but
+in vain; for however few their number may be at first, and however
+furious the battle may rage against them, they are destined to conquer.
+And herein the words of Christ will fitly apply, 'Fear not, little
+flock; for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom.'"
+P. 313.
+
+Speaking of sectarianism, he says further: "The same round of things
+will continue until the evil is remedied.... When this shall take place,
+time only can determine with certainty. It will probably commence
+slowly, and not come with any great outward observation. Few will at
+first see or embrace the way, being strange to them, and appearing on
+account of their prejudices, and the way they have been taught by the
+false prophet, to be wrong and improper: moreover, being opposed to all
+others, they will have all others to oppose them. But though they are
+despised and hated, and few in number, the Lord is with them." Pp. 322,
+323.
+
+On Rev. 16:13, 14: "I have already delivered my views with respect to
+these unclean spirits ... and it is not necessary to say much here upon
+the subject; only I would just observe, that this will be a time of
+greater trial to Christians in general, and in a time in which more will
+be deprived of every particle of true religion through the influence of
+false ministers belonging to the different societies in Christendom,
+than any that has ever yet been in the world. But while they are making
+these great exertions, they are only preparing themselves and their
+deluded votaries for a more awful and complete destruction. For God
+Almighty is against them, and they against Him; though they will know it
+not, but think perhaps all the while they are his peculiar favorites,
+and that they are employed in maintaining his cause, like the Jews
+before them, when it is only their own cause and men's traditions." P.
+338.
+
+"I am but as the voice of one crying in the wilderness of error and of
+sin, of wickedness and delusion, testifying according to the best light
+given me; and any light that I can possibly communicate will in a little
+time become as the feeble shining of the sun, by reason of the greatness
+of the light that shall be hereafter." P. 354.
+
+"A true and living testimony will go forth before this last period of
+the awful judgments of God comes to a close, and in consequence of
+rejecting it, like the Jews of old, the wrath of God will come upon them
+to the uttermost. The testimony against the worshipers of the beast, by
+the third angel, Rev. 14:9, is the testimony that effectually overthrows
+the kingdom of darkness and establishes the truth as it is in Jesus,
+pure and undefiled.... The authors of this testimony will ... unlike to
+all who go before them, attack the evil at its root, and expose the
+deceit, hypocrisy and wickedness of the different sects in a way that
+has never before been done; for which they will suffer the greatest
+persecution. You may look upon these things as the reveries of my own
+fancy; but some day or other, people will witness to the truth of what I
+now write." Pp. 421, 422.
+
+"All the reformations which go before this last great reform will only
+be partial and temporary. They will only lop off the branches, or at the
+most, only strike at the body of the corrupt tree, while the roots
+remain untouched and uninjured. But when this last testimony goes forth,
+the very roots of the corrupt tree will be attacked." P. 426.
+
+"Every sect is under an idea that whenever the Lord comes to establish
+truth in the earth, it will be to establish their creed, raise up their
+sect, and bring the whole world into their way. And when the faithful
+witnesses whom God will raise up shall openly declare that they have all
+gone out of the way, that the greatest professors have so much of guile,
+selfishness and party spirit about them as to be nothing but hypocrites,
+and that a person must be better than they are or be lost forever; that
+sects are an abomination to the Lord; denounce eternal death upon every
+advocate and adherent of men-made establishments; ... I say when such a
+testimony as this goes forth, as it sooner or later will, no wonder that
+the sects, all with one accord, should set themselves against it--should
+call it heresy--declare it will ruin the churches if it is not
+suppressed.... Although, as I have before testified, I am only as the
+voice of one crying in the wilderness--a mere babe in the knowledge of
+these things which are to be revealed hereafter, yet I expect to raise a
+host of bigots and hypocrites against me.... Nor can it be very long
+before the true light, in a very especial manner, will shine.... If
+these things do not come to pass, then let me be called an enthusiast or
+a deceiver." Pp. 444-446.
+
+ 14. And I looked, and behold a white cloud, and upon the cloud
+ one sat like unto the Son of man, having on his head a golden
+ crown, and in his hand a sharp sickle.
+
+ 15. And another angel came out of the temple, crying with a loud
+ voice to him that sat on the cloud, Thrust in thy sickle, and
+ reap: for the time has come for thee to reap; for the harvest of
+ the earth is ripe.
+
+ 16. And he that sat on the cloud thrust in his sickle on the
+ earth; and the earth was reaped.
+
+ 17. And another angel came out of the temple which is in heaven,
+ he also having a sharp sickle.
+
+ 18. And another angel came out from the altar, which had power
+ over fire; and cried with a loud cry to him that had the sharp
+ sickle, saying, Thrust in thy sharp sickle, and gather the
+ clusters of the vine of the earth; for her grapes are fully
+ ripe.
+
+ 19. And the angel thrust in his sickle into the earth, and
+ gathered the vine of the earth, and cast it into the great
+ winepress of the wrath of God.
+
+ 20. And the winepress was trodden without the city, and blood
+ came out of the winepress, even unto the horse bridles, by the
+ space of a thousand and six hundred furlongs.
+
+The special characters of this vision and their work have been very
+difficult for me to identify positively. Until clearer light on the
+matter is received, I choose to withhold an explanation rather than to
+indulge in speculation. Its usual explanation is to apply the gathering
+of the harvest of the earth to the work of the reformation now taking
+place and the vintage scene to the final destruction of the wicked,
+their punishment being symbolized by the treading of the "winepress of
+the wrath of God." This may be its signification. It is certain,
+however, that in a subsequent chapter, the final judgment of the wicked
+is symbolized by the treading of "the wine-press of the fierceness and
+wrath of Almighty God." Beyond this I can not now speak with certainty.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+ And I saw another sign in heaven, great and marvelous, seven
+ angels having the seven last plagues; for in them is filled up
+ the wrath of God.
+
+ 2. And I saw as it were a sea of glass mingled with fire: and
+ them that had gotten the victory over the beast, and over his
+ image, and over his mark, and over the number of his name, stand
+ on the sea of glass, having the harps of God.
+
+ 3. And they sing the song of Moses the servant of God, and the
+ song of the Lamb, saying, Great and marvellous are thy works,
+ Lord God Almighty; just and true are thy ways, thou King of
+ saints.
+
+ 4. Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? for
+ thou only art holy: for all nations shall come and worship
+ before thee; for thy judgments are made manifest:
+
+ 5. And after that I looked, and, behold, the temple of the
+ tabernacle of the testimony in heaven was opened:
+
+ 6. And the seven angels came out of the temple, having the seven
+ plagues, clothed in pure and white linen, and having their
+ breasts girded with golden girdles.
+
+ 7. And one of the four beasts gave unto the seven angels seven
+ golden vials full of the wrath of God, who liveth for ever and
+ ever.
+
+ 8. And the temple was filled with smoke from the glory of God,
+ and from his power; and no man was able to enter into the
+ temple, till the seven plagues of the seven angels were
+ fulfilled.
+
+The scene presented to us in this vision is but an introduction to the
+solemn scenes of awful judgment immediately following. The first thing
+that attracted John's attention was a sign, great and marvelous, "seven
+angels having the seven last plagues." The reason why these are
+denominated the "last plagues" is because that "in them is filled up the
+wrath of God." These are the completion, then, the finishing up of the
+work of divine judgment against the persecutors of the church. When the
+last one is poured out the work is done, the time of judgment is over.
+These angels are not designed to symbolize any agencies on earth, for
+they do not appear on earth; they are simply the conductors of the
+Revelation. God never commissions his people on earth to perform such
+great judgments upon their persecutors as the temporal judgments of the
+seven last plagues will be shown to be; but, on the contrary, he has
+given them the express command not to avenge themselves, but to suffer
+wrong. He himself lays exclusive claim to this prerogative, saying,
+"Vengeance is _mine_; I will repay, saith the Lord." Rom. 12:19.
+
+As soon as the subject of the plagues is introduced and before they are
+poured out, the narrative suddenly changes and a short history of God's
+redeemed saints is given. This, perhaps, thus occurs for two reasons--to
+assist us in fixing the chronology of the events described and to
+encourage us with the thought that, even while the awful judgments of
+God are being "made manifest" upon the haughty oppressors of earth, God
+has a chosen people who have "gotten the victory over the beast, and
+over his image, and over his mark, and over the number of his name."
+They stand upon the "sea of glass, having the harps of God"--a symbol of
+melody and praise--and sing the song of Moses and the song of the Lamb.
+The song of Moses was that sung by the Israelites when they had escaped
+to the further side of the Red Sea, thus securing perfect deliverance
+from their enemies. So, also, this company of worshipers sing a great
+song of deliverance--deliverance from the beast and his image. In
+chapters 4 and 5 John saw the great host redeemed before the apostasy
+standing on this sea of glass, singing the song of redemption--the song
+of the Lamb--but this company are enabled to sing another song as
+well--the song of deliverance--for they have "gotten the victory over
+the beast, and over his image, and over his mark, and over the number of
+his name." Halleluiah! "Great and marvelous are thy works, Lord God
+Almighty; just and true are thy ways, thou King of saints."
+
+As before stated (chap. 8:3), the heavenly world as opened up to John
+appeared symbolized after the sanctuary of the temple. By "the temple of
+the tabernacle of the testimony," out of which the seven angels came
+fully prepared for their work, is meant the most holy place of the
+sanctuary, called "the tabernacle of the testimony" because there was
+deposited in it, beneath the wings of the cherubim, the ark of the
+testimony, or God's covenant. It was therefore as from the most holy
+place of the sanctuary--from the very presence of the Deity--that these
+angels went forth commissioned to execute the seven last plagues. This
+shows that they went by the divine command as ministers of vengeance.
+The purity and beauty of their attire denoted both the spotless
+excellency of their characters and the justice of the work in which they
+were to engage. Although theirs was a work of awful avenging judgment,
+still the garments they wore would not be soiled thereby; and their
+flowing robes of white were girded up with a beautiful golden girdle.
+Therefore there is no inconsistency between the purity and love of God
+and the work of his vengeance. It would seem to human reasoning that the
+two are irreconcilable, but these symbols teach differently.
+
+These angels received their vials (goblets) of wrath at the hands of one
+of the four living creatures, who are symbols of the redeemed sons of
+earth. Their deliverance by one of these doubtless denotes that these
+judgments were to be executed in their behalf and in answer to their
+prayers. For centuries the wrath of deadly persecutors had been poured
+out upon God's people, until the cry ascended from the lips of the
+martyrs, "How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge and
+avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth?" Chap. 6:10. Now their
+prayer is answered, and by their hand, as it were, the vials of wrath
+are delivered with the divine sanction unto the seven angels to be
+poured out upon these proud oppressors of the Lord's people. These
+vials, too, were "full of wrath." What a fearful expression! _Full of
+wrath_, even "_the wrath of God_, who liveth forever and ever." There
+was nothing in them but wrath and that to the very brim.
+
+As soon as the vials were delivered, "the temple was filled with smoke
+from the glory of God." This symbol is taken from the Shekinah which
+filled the ancient tabernacle. We read that when the tabernacle was
+finished, "a cloud covered the tent of the congregation, and the glory
+of the Lord filled the tabernacle. And Moses was not able to enter into
+the tent of the congregation, because the cloud abode thereon, and the
+glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle." Ex. 40:34, 35. The same thing
+occurred at the dedication of Solomon's temple. "The cloud filled the
+house of the Lord, so that the priests could not stand to minister
+because of the cloud: for the glory of the Lord had filled the house of
+the Lord." 1 Kings 8:10, 11. So, also, in the symbol before us the glory
+of God filled the temple so that no man was able to enter. This is
+intended to set forth the fact that these avenging judgments were for
+the manifestation of the divine glory and that there was no access to
+the throne of God nor to his mercy-seat to alter them or to stay their
+execution. Such is the sublime scene presented to our view preparatory
+to the pouring out of the seven last great plagues.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+ And I heard a great voice out of the temple saying to the seven
+ angels, Go your ways, and pour out the vials of the wrath of God
+ upon the earth.
+
+ 2. And the first went, and poured out his vial upon the earth;
+ and there fell a noisome and grievous sore upon the men which
+ had the mark of the beast, and upon them which worshipped his
+ image.
+
+A great voice out of the temple, now filled with the glory of the divine
+presence, commanded the seven angels to enter upon their mission. It
+came, therefore, from God, who alone fixed the time for these judgments
+to begin.
+
+Before an intelligent explanation of these plagues can be given,
+however, the following points must be made clear: 1. _Where_ the vials
+were poured out. 2. _Upon whom_ they were emptied. 3. _Why_ they were
+thus poured out. 4. _When_ they were fulfilled, or, rather, at what time
+they began to be fulfilled. These points we will first briefly consider
+in the order named, after which we will discuss the _nature_ of the
+plagues and their individual application.
+
+1. The place where these vials of wrath were poured out was "upon the
+earth"; that is, the Apocalyptic earth, or that portion of the earth
+made the special subject of Apocalyptic vision; namely, the territory of
+the ten kingdoms. The last two vials, however, will be found to embrace
+a larger territory.
+
+2. They were poured out upon those "which had the mark of the beast, and
+upon them which worshiped his image." It has already been shown that the
+image made by the second beast of chapter 13 was the Protestant
+ecclesiastical organizations; hence the "beast" here referred to, to
+which the image was made, must signify the ecclesiastical hierarchy of
+Rome, the original. So the plagues fell upon the adherents of both
+organized Romanism and Protestantism in Europe.
+
+3. The reason why the judgments of the first three vials especially
+descended upon them was because "they had shed the blood of saints and
+prophets." Verse 6. That Romanism was a fierce oppressor of God's people
+has already been noticed: Protestantism as their persecutor, also, must
+now be considered further. Protestant sects after they first became
+established and got power in their own hands, acted much in the same
+manner as the church of Rome did before them, persecuting, banishing,
+imprisoning, and even putting to death those who refused to receive
+their tenets or to conform to the system of religion they had adopted.
+The Lutherans, at first a pious, persecuted people, on becoming numerous
+and exalted by the favor of the great, established a certain system of
+religion and then, when it was in their power, persecuted, imprisoned,
+banished, or put to death all that dissented. As early after the
+Reformation as 1574, in a convention at Torgaw, they established the
+real presence in the eucharist and instigated the Elector of Saxony to
+seize, imprison, and banish all the secret Calvinists that differed from
+them in sentiment, and to reduce their followers by every act of
+violence, to renounce their sentiments and to confess the ubiquity.
+Peucer, for his opinions, suffered ten years of imprisonment in the
+severest manner. In 1577 a form of concord was produced in which the
+real manducation of Christ's body and blood in the eucharist was
+established and heresy and excommunication laid on all that refused this
+as an article of faith, with pains and penalties to be enforced by the
+secular arm. Crellius, in 1601, was put to death.
+
+In Switzerland, before the city of Zurich was entirely safe itself from
+the encroachments of Romanism, its Protestant council condemned a young
+man named Felix Mantz to be drowned because he insisted that the
+baby-sprinkling of Romanism was not baptism and that all who had
+received the rite ought to be immersed. This sentence was carried into
+effect. The severest laws were passed in different countries of Europe
+against the Anabaptists, and large numbers were banished or burnt at the
+stake. See Encyclopædia Britannica, Art. Anabaptists. Protestants may
+claim this was because of their fanaticism on other lines; but it
+remains a fact, nevertheless, that the chief sentiment at the base of
+these laws was religious persecution and that Protestants sanctioned and
+carried them into execution.
+
+King Henry VIII., the founder of the Established Church in England,
+adopted the most stringent laws to enforce its doctrines. Certain
+articles of religion were drawn up, known in history as the "Bloody Six
+Articles." Concerning these the People's Cyclopædia says: "The doctrines
+were substantially those of the Roman Catholic Church. Whoever denied
+the first articles (that embodying the doctrine of transubstantiation)
+was to be declared a heretic, and burnt without opportunity of
+abjuration; whoso spoke against the other five articles should, for the
+first offense, forfeit his property; and whosoever refused to abjure his
+first offense, or committed a second, was to die like a felon." Art.
+Henry VIII. "The royal reformer persecuted alike Catholics and
+Protestants. Thus, on one occasion, three Catholics who denied that the
+king was the rightful head of the church, and three Protestants who
+disputed the doctrine of the real presence in the sacrament,... were
+dragged on the same sled to the place of execution." In speaking of that
+period of history and of the religious persecutions of the times, Myers
+says: "Punishment of heresy was then regarded, by both Catholics and
+Protestants alike, as a duty which could be neglected by those in
+authority only at the peril of Heaven's displeasure. Believing this,
+those of that age could consistently do nothing less than labor to
+exterminate heresy with axe, sword and fagot." General History, p. 553.
+
+That religious intolerance even at a later date was practised in
+England, witness the twelve years' imprisonment of John Bunyan and the
+hundreds confined in jails throughout that country for not conforming to
+the established religion. It was such severe persecution by that early
+Protestant sect that drove the Puritans from England's fair country to
+the then inhospitable shores of America, that they might have an
+opportunity to worship God according to the dictates of their own
+conscience. In Scotland the Covenanters "insisted on their right to
+worship God in their own way. They were therefore subjected to most
+cruel and unrelenting persecution. They were hunted by English troopers
+over their native moors and among the wild recesses of their mountains,
+whither they secretly retired for prayer and worship. The tales of the
+suffering of the Scotch Covenanters at the hands of the English
+Protestants form a most harrowing chapter of the records of the ages of
+religious persecution." This list might be considerably augmented, but
+it is unnecessary. However, that Protestant persecution and tyranny
+should never reach the enormous extent of the Romanists before them is
+proved by the fact that her horns were "like a lamb." Chap. 13:11.
+
+4. It is very important for us to ascertain the _time_ for the beginning
+of these plagues; for they can not be identified unless we understand
+the chronology of the events described. It is a fact no one can question
+that the seventh plague is the judgment of the last day, for in the
+seven "is filled up" the wrath of God; hence they are denominated the
+_last_ plagues. It is also a fact, well-known to all who are spiritual
+and who understand the truth in the present reformation, that certain
+events said to occur under the period of the sixth plague are _now_
+taking place; namely, the confederation of all false religions to oppose
+the people of God, led on by the "unclean spirits" that come "out of the
+mouth of the dragon, and out of the mouth of the beast, and out of the
+mouth of the false prophet." Verses 13, 14.
+
+Therefore five of the plagues precede the time in which we are now
+living. It is evident that the plagues could not begin before the
+reformation; for the vials were poured out upon the "image of the
+beast"--Protestantism--also. Hence we are directed to some period
+between the sixteenth century and the present day for their
+commencement. The reason _why_ the first judgments especially were
+poured out will assist us in determining the starting-point--"They have
+shed the blood of saints and prophets." This expression seems to
+indicate that the time for the plagues to begin was after Romanism and
+Protestantism ceased putting people to death because of their religious
+sentiments. That this is the correct idea is clearly proved by what was
+said to the martyrs when they cried unto God for the avenging of their
+blood on them that dwell on the earth. "And it was said unto them, that
+they should rest yet for a little season, until their fellow-servants
+also and their brethren, that should be killed as they were, should be
+fulfilled." Chap. 6:10, 11. For additional information concerning the
+terrible persecutions that followed the Sixteenth Century Reformation,
+see remarks on chapter 6:10, 11.
+
+We must now determine about what time the great persecutions referred to
+ceased, or nearly ceased, and that will give us the right starting-point
+from which to reckon the pouring out of the first vial. In A.D. 1685 the
+revocation of the Edict of Nantes, by Louis XIV. of France, took place,
+and in the terrible persecutions that occurred during his reign three
+hundred thousand are said to have lost their lives. The time that we are
+endeavoring to establish, then, must be later than the seventeenth
+century. Louis died in 1714. Persecutions continued from time to time in
+France, with considerable severity, until about the middle of the
+century. "Soon after this ... the flowing of heretic blood ceased,
+though an effort was made in 1765 by the Popish clergy to resist the
+tendency to toleration by a remonstrance to the king." History of
+Romanism, p. 608. A few individual cases of persecution may have
+occurred later in other countries; but in the main we are safe in
+pointing to about the middle of the eighteenth century for the general
+cessation of these religious _murders_. We will now consider the nature
+of the first plague.
+
+The pouring out of this vial produced the most painful malignant ulcers
+upon the human body. Such ulcers are evidently not political calamities;
+for the symbol is drawn, not from nature, but from human life. Still, it
+is not drawn from a human being as a whole (in which case religious
+events would be symbolized), but only from his body. What, then, is the
+analagous object of which the human body may stand as a proper
+representative? Evidently, the mind. We would naturally pass from the
+bodily to the mental; and what painful ulcers are to the one, marring
+its beauty and filling it with burning anguish, such are blasphemous
+opinions and malignant principles to the other.
+
+Considering the time for this plague pointed out above, the student of
+Revelation who is acquainted with the history of the past will scarcely
+fail to discern at once, in the striking points of this symbol, those
+horrible principles of infidelity, atheism, and licentiousness, which
+were spread so extensively over Europe during the latter half of the
+eighteenth century, and which were the most efficient causes in bringing
+about the fearful convulsions which followed in the French Revolution.
+That all may understand this matter in its proper light, however, it
+will be necessary to state some of the facts respecting this "noisome
+and grievous sore" that fell at that time upon the inhabitants of
+Europe. In writing upon the causes that led up to the French Revolution,
+Mr. Wickes gathered the following facts of history mainly from the
+Encyclopædia of Religious Knowledge, under the articles headed
+_Philosophists_ and _Illuminati_. I will quote his own language, as it
+is very pointed.
+
+"Philosophists was a name given to several persons in France, who
+entered into a combination to overthrow the religion of Jesus, and
+eradicate from the human heart every religious sentiment. The man more
+particularly to whom this idea first occurred, was Voltaire, who being
+weary (as he said himself) of hearing it repeated that twelve men were
+sufficient to establish Christianity, resolved to prove that one might
+be sufficient to overturn it. Full of this project, he swore, before the
+year 1730, to devote his life to its accomplishment, and for some time
+he flattered himself that he should enjoy alone the glory of destroying
+the Christian religion. He found, however, that associates would be
+necessary; and from the numerous tribe of his admirers and disciples, he
+chose D'Alembert and Diderot, as the most proper persons to co-operate
+with him in his designs. He contrived also to enlist Frederick II., king
+of Prussia, who became one of his most zealous coadjutors, until he
+found that Voltaire was waging war with the throne as well as the altar.
+This, indeed, was not originally Voltaire's intention. He was vain; from
+natural disposition an aristocrat, and an admirer of royalty. But when
+he found that almost every sovereign but Frederick disapproved of his
+ambitious designs, as soon as he perceived their issue, he determined to
+oppose all the governments on earth rather than forfeit the glory with
+which he flattered himself, of vanquishing Christ and his apostles in
+the field of controversy.
+
+"He now set himself, with his associates, D'Alembert and Diderot, to
+excite universal discontent with the established order of things. For
+this purpose, they formed secret societies, assumed new names, and
+employed an enigmatical language. In their secret meetings they
+professed to celebrate the mysteries of _Mythra_; and their great
+object, as they professed to one another, was to confound the wretch,
+meaning Jesus Christ. Hence their secret watchword was 'Crush the
+wretch.' The following are some of their doctrines, as found in their
+books expressly designed for general circulation. Sometimes standing out
+in their naked horror, at other times enveloped in sophistry and
+disguise. The Universal Cause, that God of the philosophers, of the
+Jews, and of the Christians, is but a chimera and a phantom--The
+phenomena of nature only prove the existence of God to a few
+prepossessed men--It is more reasonable to admit, with Manes, of a
+two-fold God, than of the God of Christianity--We can not know whether a
+God really exists, or whether there is any difference between good and
+evil, or vice and virtue--Nothing can be more absurd than to believe the
+soul a spiritual being--The immortality of the soul, so far from
+stimulating men to the practise of virtue, is nothing but a barbarous,
+desperate, fatal tenet, and contrary to all legislation--All ideas of
+justice and injustice, of virtue and vice, of glory and infamy, are
+purely arbitrary, and dependent on custom--Conscience and remorse are
+nothing but the foresight of those physical penalties to which crimes
+expose us--The man who is above the law, can commit, without remorse,
+the dishonest act that may serve his purpose--The fear of God, so far
+from being the beginning of wisdom, should be the beginning of
+folly--The command to love one's parents is more the work of education
+than of nature--Modesty is only an invention of refined
+voluptuousness--The law which condemns married people to live together,
+becomes barbarous and cruel on the day they cease to love one another.
+
+"Such were the atrocious sentiments, though sometimes artfully veiled,
+which were disseminated in their books, and which, spreading all over
+Europe, imperceptibly took possession of the public mind, and prepared
+the way for the subversion of religion, morals, and government. As soon
+as the sale of the works was sufficient to pay expenses, inferior
+editions were printed and given away, or sold at a very low price;
+circulating libraries of them were formed, and reading societies
+instituted. While they constantly denied these productions to the world,
+they contrived to give them a false celebrity through their confidential
+agents and correspondents, who were not themselves always trusted with
+the entire secret.
+
+"By degrees they got possession nearly of all the reviews and periodical
+publications; established a general intercourse, by means of hawkers and
+pedlars, with the distant provinces; and instituted an office to supply
+all schools with teachers; and thus did they acquire unprecedented
+dominion over every species of literature, over the minds of all ranks
+of people, and the education of the youth, without giving any alarm to
+the world. The lovers of wit and polite literature were caught by
+Voltaire; the men of science were perverted, and children corrupted in
+the first rudiments of learning, by D'Alembert and Diderot; stronger
+appetites were fed by the secret club of Baron Holbach; the imaginations
+of the higher orders were set dangerously afloat by Montesquieu; and the
+multitude of all ranks was surprised, confounded, and hurried away by
+Rousseau. Thus was the public mind in France completely corrupted, and
+the way prepared for the dreadful scenes that followed."
+
+But there is also another chapter to the dark history of this "noisome
+and grievous sore." The same author says again:
+
+"After Voltaire had broached his system of infidel philosophy, and
+brought it unto perfection, it was taken up by the celebrated Dr. Adam
+Weishaupt, professor of canon law in the University of Ingolstadt, and
+by him perfected as a system of light or illuminism. On the 1st of May,
+1776, he founded, among the students of the above-named University, a
+secret society under the name of the _Illuminati_, whose avowed object
+was to diffuse the light of science, these secret societies being so
+many radiating centers of light. But the science taught was the most
+atrocious infidelity, and its object the overturning of all government
+and religion. Free masonry, being in high repute all over Europe when
+Weishaupt first formed the plan of his society, he availed himself of
+its secrecy to introduce his new order, which rapidly spread, by the
+efforts of its founders and disciples, through all those countries, and
+found its way even to the United States. It would not be possible here
+to give even an outline of the nature and constitution of this
+extraordinary society--of its secrets and mysteries--of the deep
+dissimulation, consummate hypocrisy, and shocking impiety of its founder
+and his associates--of their Jesuitical arts in concealing their real
+objects, and their incredible industry and astonishing exertions in
+making converts--of the absolute despotism and complete system of
+_espionage_ established throughout the order--of the blind obedience
+exacted of the _novices_, and the absolute power of life and death
+assumed by the order and conceded by the novices--of the pretended
+morality, real blasphemies, and absolute atheism of the founder and his
+tried friends. Reference can only be made to these things as
+well-established facts.
+
+"It is important here to bear in mind one or two facts, in order to
+realize what an engine of corruption this secret organization of the
+_Illuminati_ was. One fact is, the high popularity which these secret
+societies at that period enjoyed. It was unbounded. There is something
+which commends such secret organizations most powerfully to the depraved
+human nature. Men love them because they are secret, and because they
+can wield such tremendous power. The other fact to be considered, is the
+absence, to a such vast extent, of the controlling elements of true
+religion in the European mind, and its predisposition to skepticism. The
+Reformation of the Sixteenth Century had broken the shackles of priestly
+Papal superstition over the human mind; and [true] evangelical doctrine
+not being introduced to supply the vacuum, the mass swung readily over
+from the regions of dark superstition to blank atheism. Thus were the
+elements ready prepared to hand for such spirits as Voltaire,
+D'Alembert, Diderot, Weishaupt, and others, to work upon, and by reason
+of their secret powerful agencies, to mould to their own liking.
+
+"It was now this damning system of infidelity, under the specious name
+of philosophy, light, and science, spread with such untiring industry
+over the European mind, that unhinged the whole framework of society,
+and prepared it, like a vast magazine, for an awful explosion. All the
+principles that held society together in the fear of God and future
+retribution--regard for human law--respect for magistrates, parents, and
+the marriage-tie--yea, in the very distinctions of virtue and vice, had
+been unsettled or taken away. They had been reasoned down and laughed
+out of the world; and when these only restraints, which God has imposed
+upon human selfishness and passion were removed, what was then to hold
+back those fierce passions and that deep selfishness from the most
+unbounded excesses? God was no more feared--government was no more
+sacred--religion was a delusion--immorality was a lie--virtue was a
+name--the marriage-tie was a farce--modesty was refined voluptuousness:
+and when men were persuaded of these things, society began to roll and
+heave under the long swells of that portentous storm of wrath which was
+soon to break, in all its desolating fury, over the earth."
+
+In the facts here presented it may be seen how far we are justified in
+applying to them this first vial of wrath. The vial was poured out "upon
+the earth"--on the inhabitants of the ten kingdoms when in a state of
+tranquility. This was their condition, unsuspicious of danger, when the
+dread infection was spread through society. According to the testimony
+of Pres. Dwight, within ten years from the first establishment of the
+Illuminati, in 1776, "they were established in great numbers through
+Germany, Sweden, Prussia, Poland, Austria, Holland, France, Switzerland,
+Italy, England, Scotland, and America. They spread with a rapidity which
+nothing but fact could have induced any sober mind to believe."
+
+This system of infidelity is well symbolized by a noisome, grevious
+ulcer, which is loathsome to the sight, offensive to the smell,
+corrupting to the body, and productive of awful pain. That it appeared
+so to others besides the author of the Revelation is shown by the
+following epithets which Burke, the celebrated English orator, applied
+to the spirit of the French Revolution, which was only the discharged
+virus of these ulcers. He styled it "the fever of Jacobinism;" "the
+epidemic of atheistical fanaticism;" "an evil lying deep in the
+corruptions of human nature;" "such a plague, that the precaution of the
+most severe quarantine ought to be established against it." The result,
+he says, was "the corruption of all morals," "the decomposition of all
+society." What greater plague could fall upon Romanism and Protestantism
+than this fearful scourge of infidelity?
+
+I have dwelt for a considerable length of time upon this subject,
+because of its deep interest, and also because I desired to verify the
+application of the symbol as much as possible, on account of its close
+connection with the pouring out of the vials which follow.
+
+ 3. And the second angel poured out his vial upon the sea; and it
+ became as the blood of a dead man: and every living soul died in
+ the sea.
+
+This vial was poured out upon the "sea." The sea is a large body of
+water within the earth, subject to violent storms and agitations. As a
+symbol it would denote some central power or kingdom within the symbolic
+earth in a state of revolution. The effects produced by this vial were
+two-fold--the waters were changed into blood as of a dead man, and all
+the living creatures in the sea died. The waters of the sea represent
+the inhabitants of this kingdom (see a similar explanation of _water_ in
+chap. 17:15) as the earth does the inhabitants of the empire, or the ten
+kingdoms. The living creatures in the sea, therefore, could signify the
+rulers and princes of the kingdom, as they bear an analagous relation to
+the people that fishes do to the waters. The statement that the waters
+of the sea became "as the blood of a dead man" is doubtless intended to
+signify a much more dreadful state of things than if they had simply
+been changed to blood. They were converted into black and poisonous, or
+corrupt, blood. This denotes the vast slaughter and massacre of the
+inhabitants of this kingdom; while the death of the living creatures
+denotes the extinction of those in power.
+
+It may appear at first that making the conversion of water into blood a
+symbol of bloodshed is adopting the literal method of interpretation;
+but not so, and for the following reason: The symbol is taken from
+nature, the waters of the sea representing the inhabitants of the
+kingdom. The waters are changed into an unnatural state or element, that
+of blood, and this change denotes an analagous one passing upon the
+inhabitants. Their continuing in life would be their remaining as
+waters: their massacre and destruction would be the waters changed to
+blood--a horrible and unnatural element. Likewise, the death of the
+living things in the sea is a similar destruction overtaking the kings,
+rulers, and princes.
+
+With our understanding of the nature of the first vial, which prepared
+the way for the pouring out of this one, we shall have no difficulty
+whatever in identifying this symbol with the terrible convulsions of the
+French Revolution. It followed as a necessary consequence of the first.
+Voltaire and his coadjutors had insulted and trampled in the dust
+everything held sacred in human eyes, and this fully prepared the way
+for the scenes of terror that followed.
+
+In studying these vials the reader should bear in mind constantly the
+reason _why_ they were sent as judgments upon the nations of
+Europe--because of their former oppression of God's people. From the
+days when the Popes received their first temporal authority at the hands
+of the Carlovingian king, Pepin and Charlemagne, France[11] constituted
+the real backbone of the Papacy, the very center of her power and
+authority, as all history will show. In the fourteenth century the Papal
+seat was removed from Rome to Avignon, in France, where it remained for
+about seventy years. During this period all the Popes were French, and
+"all their policies were shaped and controlled by the French kings." To
+write a history of the Papacy during the Dark Ages is to outline the
+history of France, so closely are their affairs interwoven. Hence it is
+only natural that she should be symbolized as the "sea" in this part of
+the Apocalypse, with the other nations as tributaries. Ver. 4-6. That
+the French Revolution was in its effects a terrible blow to the thrones
+of despotism throughout Europe is shown by the following quotation from
+the Encyclopædia Britannica: "We are coming to the verge of the French
+Revolution, which _surpasses all other revolutions the world has seen_
+in its completeness, the largeness of its theatre, the long preparation
+for it ... its _influence on the modern history of Europe_." Art.
+France.
+
+[Footnote 11: Pepin and Charlemagne were, properly speaking, simply
+German princes reigning in Gaul. The kingdom of France is usually dated
+from the accession of the first of the Capetian kings, late in the tenth
+century, 987. However, the Frankish nation, of whom the Carlovingian
+kings were leaders, laid the foundation of the French kingdom and gave a
+new name to Gaul--France.]
+
+This revolution commenced on the fifth of May, 1789, in the Convocation
+of the States General, for the redress of grievances and the extrication
+of the government and nation from the difficulties under which they were
+laboring. A conflict had been going on between despotism and popular
+rights, the throne and nobility contending for absolute power, and the
+people, for freedom. But when in this encounter the popular party
+triumphed, there was no fear of God before the eyes of those who seized
+the reins of government. The infidelity of Voltaire and his associates
+had removed the last restraint upon human passion, and the scenes of
+terror that followed are without a parallel in history. The king was
+condemned to death and executed. The barbarous execution of the queen,
+Marie Antoinette, followed in about six months, and this was immediately
+succeeded by the decree of the National Convention, of the most infamous
+character, that of the violation of the tombs of St. Dennis and the
+profanation of the sepulchres of the kings of France. I will quote from
+Sir A. Alison's noted History of Europe:
+
+"By a decree of the Convention, these venerable asylums of departed
+greatness were ordered to be destroyed.... A furious multitude
+precipitated itself out of Paris; the tombs of Henry IV., of Francis I.,
+and of Louis XII., were ransacked, and their bones scattered in the air.
+Even the glorious name of Turenne could not protect his grave from
+spoilation. His remains were almost undecayed, as when he received the
+fatal wound on the banks of the Lech. The bones of Charles V., the
+savior of his country, were dispersed. At his feet was found the coffin
+of the faithful Du Gueselin, and the French hands profaned the skeleton
+before which English invasion had rolled back. Most of these tombs were
+found to be strongly secured. Much time, and no small exertion of skill
+and labor, were required to burst their barriers. They would have
+resisted forever the decay of time or the violence of enemies; they
+yielded to the fury of domestic dissension. This was followed
+immediately by a general attack upon the monuments and remains of
+antiquity throughout all France. The sepulchres of the great of past
+ages, of the barons and generals of the feudal ages, of the
+paladins, and of the crusaders, were involved in one undistinguished
+ruin. It seemed as if the glories of antiquity were forgotten, or sought
+to be buried in oblivion. The tomb of Du Gueselin shared the same fate
+as that of Louis XIV. The skulls of monarchs and heroes were tossed
+about like foot balls by the profane multitude; like the grave-diggers
+in Hamlet, they made a jest of the lips before which the nations had
+trembled."
+
+Having begun by waging this profane warfare upon their own glorious
+dead, another scene of the fatal drama immediately succeeded. The same
+author continues: "Having massacred the great of the present and
+insulted the illustrious of former ages, nothing remained to the
+revolutionists but to direct their vengeance against heaven itself.
+Pache, Hebert, and Chaumette, the leaders of the municipality publicly
+expressed their determination 'to dethrone the God of heaven, as well as
+the monarchs of earth.' To accomplish this design, they prevailed on
+Gobet, the apostate constitutional bishop of Paris, to appear at the bar
+of the Assembly, accompanied by some of the clergy of his diocese, and
+there abjure the Christian faith. He declared 'that no other national
+religion was now required but that of Liberty, equality, and morality.'
+Many of the constitutional bishops and clergy in the Convention joined
+in the proposition. Crowds of drunken artisans and shameless prostitutes
+crowded to the bar, and trampled under their feet the sacred vases,
+consecrated for ages to the holiest purposes of religion. The churches
+were stripped of all their ornaments; their plate and valuable contents
+brought in heaps to the municipality and the Convention, from whence
+they were sent to the mint to be melted down. Trampling under foot the
+images of our Savior and the Virgin, they elevated, amid shouts of
+applause, the busts of Marat and Lepelletier, and danced around them,
+singing parodies on the Halleluiah, and dancing the Carmagnole.
+
+"Shortly after a still more indecent exhibition took place before the
+assembly.... Hebert and Chaumette, and their associates, appeared at the
+bar and declared 'that God did not exist, and that the worship of Reason
+was to be substituted in his stead.' A veiled female, arrayed in blue
+drapery, was brought into the Assembly; and Chaumette, taking her by the
+hand, 'Mortals,' said he, 'cease to tremble before the powerless
+thunders of a God whom your fears have created. Henceforth acknowledge
+no divinity but Reason. I offer you its noblest and purest image; if you
+must have idols, sacrifice only to this.' When, letting fall the veil,
+he exclaimed, 'Fall before the august Senate of Freedom, O Veil of
+Reason!' At the same time, the goddess appeared personified by a
+celebrated beauty, the wife of Momoro, a printer, known in more than one
+character to most of the Convention. The goddess after being embraced by
+the president, was mounted on a magnificent car, and conducted, amid an
+immense crowd, to the cathedral of Notre Dame, to take the place of the
+Deity. There she was elevated on a high altar, and received the
+adoration of all present, while the young women, her attendants, whose
+alluring looks already sufficiently indicated their profession, retired
+into the chapels around the choir, where every species of licentiousness
+and obscenity was indulged in without control, with hardly any veil from
+the public gaze. To such a length was this carried, that Robespierre
+afterward declared that Chaumette deserved death for the abominations he
+had permitted on that occasion. Thenceforward that ancient edifice was
+called the _Temple of Reason_."
+
+Such horrible events are sickening to relate; but as I started out to
+describe the condition of this "sea" when it became as the blood of a
+dead man, I must be faithful to the task. God was now dethroned; the
+services of religion abandoned; every tenth day set apart for the
+hellish orgies of atheism and Reason; Marat was deified; the instrument
+of death sanctified by the name "the holy Guillotine"; on the public
+cemeteries was inscribed, "Death is an Eternal Sleep"; marriage was a
+civil contract, binding only during the pleasure of the contracting
+parties. Mademoiselle Arnout, a celebrated comedian, expressed the
+public feeling when she said, "_Marriage the sacrament of adultery_."
+What an awful harvest would be expected of such seed! Alison continues:
+
+"A Revolutionary Tribunal was formed at Nantes, under the direction of
+Carrier, and it soon outstripped even the rapid march of Danton and
+Robespierre. Their principle was that it was necessary to destroy _en
+masse_, all the prisoners. At their command was formed a corps, called
+the Legion of Marat, composed of the most determined and bloodthirsty of
+the revolutionists, the members of which were entitled, on their own
+authority, to incarcerate any person whom they chose. The number of
+their prisoners was soon between three and four thousand, and they
+divided among themselves all their property. Whenever a further supply
+of captives was wanted, the alarm was spread of a counter-revolution,
+the _generale_ beat, the cannon planted; and this was followed
+immediately by innumerable arrests. Nor were they long in disposing of
+their captives. The miserable wretches were either slain with poinards
+in prison, or carried out in a vessel and drowned by wholesale in the
+Loire. On one occasion a hundred 'fanatical priests,' as they were
+termed, were taken out together, striped of their clothes, and
+precipitated into the waters.... Women big with child, infants eight,
+nine, and ten years of age, were thrown together into the stream, on the
+sides of which men, armed with sabres, were placed to cut off their
+heads if the waves should throw them undrowned on the shore.
+
+"On one occasion, by orders of Carrier, twenty-three of the
+revolutionists, on another twenty-four, were guillotined without any
+trial. The executioner remonstrated, but in vain. Among them were many
+children of seven or eight years of age, and seven women; the
+executioner died two or three days after, with horror at what he himself
+had done. So great was the multitude of captives who were brought in on
+all sides, that the executioners, as well as the company of Marat,
+declared themselves exhausted with fatigue; and a new method of
+disposing of them was adopted, borrowed from Nero, but improved on the
+plan of that tyrant. A hundred or a hundred and fifty victims, for the
+most part women and children, were crowded together in a boat, with a
+concealed trap-door in the bottom, which was conducted into the middle
+of the Loire; at a signal given, the crew leaped into another boast, the
+bolts were withdrawn, and the shrieking victims precipitated into the
+waters, amid the laughter of the company of Marat, who stood on the
+banks to cut down any who approached the shore. This was what Carrier
+called his _Republican Baptisms_. The _Republican Marriages_ were, if
+possible, a still greater refinement of cruelty. Two persons of
+different sexes, bereft of every species of dress, were bound together,
+and after being left in torture in that situation for half an hour,
+thrown into the river. Such was the quantity of corpses accumulated in
+the Loire, that the water of that river was affected, so as to render a
+public ordinance necessary, forbidding the use of it to the inhabitants;
+and the mariners, when they heaved their anchors, frequently brought up
+boats charged with corpses. Birds of prey flocked to the shores and fed
+on human flesh; while the very fish became so poisonous, as to induce an
+order of the municipality of Nantes, prohibiting them to be taken by the
+fishermen.
+
+"The scenes in the prisons which preceded these horrible executions
+exceeded all that romance had figured of the terrible. Many women died
+of terror the moment a man entered their cells, conceiving that they
+were about to be led out to the noyades; the floors were covered with
+the bodies of their infants, numbers of whom were yet quivering in the
+agonies of death. On one occasion, the inspector entered the prison to
+seek for a child, where, the evening before, he had left above three
+hundred infants; they were all gone in the morning, having been drowned
+the preceding night. Fifteen thousand persons perished either under the
+hands of the executioner, or of disease in prison, in one month: the
+total victims of the Reign of Terror at that place exceeded thirty
+thousand."
+
+After narrating scenes of terror in Paris, Alison says again: "Such
+accumulated horrors annihilated all the charities and intercourse of
+life. Before daybreak the shops of the provision merchants were besieged
+by crowds of women and children, clamoring for the food which the law of
+the _maximum_ in general prevented them from obtaining. The farmers
+trembled to bring their fruits to the market, the shop-keepers to expose
+them to sale. The richest quarters of the town were deserted; no
+equipages of crowds of passengers were to be seen on the streets; the
+sinister words, _Propriete Nationale_, imprinted in large characters on
+the walls, everywhere showed how far the work of confiscation had
+proceeded. Passengers hesitated to address their most intimate friends
+on meeting; the extent of calamity had rendered men suspicious even of
+those they loved most. Every one assumed the coarsest dress, and the
+most squalid appearance; an elegant exterior would have been the certain
+forerunner of destruction. At one hour only were any symptoms of
+animation seen: it was when the victims were conveyed to execution; the
+humane fled with horror from the sight, the infuriated rushed in crowds
+to satiate their eyes with the sight of human agony.
+
+"Night came, but with it no diminution of the anxiety of the people.
+Every family early assembled its members; with trembling looks they
+gazed around the room, fearful that the very walls might harbor
+traitors. The sound of a foot, the stroke of a hammer, a voice in the
+streets, froze all hearts with horror. If a knock was heard at the door,
+every one, in agonized suspense, expected his fate. Unable to endure
+such protracted misery, numbers committed suicide. 'Had the reign of
+Robespierre,' said Freron, 'continued longer, multitudes would have
+thrown themselves under the guillotine; the first of social affections,
+the love of life, was already extinguished in almost every heart.'"
+
+With one more quotation from this historian I will dismiss this horrible
+theme: "The combination of wicked men who thereafter governed France, is
+without parallel in the history of the world. Their power, based on the
+organized weight of the multitude, and the ardent co-operation of the
+municipalities, everywhere installed by them in the position of power,
+was irresistible. All bowed the neck before this gigantic assemblage of
+wickedness. The revolutionary excesses daily increased, in consequence
+of the union which the constant dread of retribution produced among
+their perpetrators. There was no medium between taking part in these
+atrocities, and falling a victim to them. Virtue seemed powerless;
+energy appeared only in the extremity of resignation; religion in the
+heroism of which death was endured. There was not a hope left for
+France, had it not been for the dissentions which, as the natural result
+of their wickedness, sprung up among the authors of the public
+calamities.
+
+"It is impossible not to be struck, in looking back on the fate of these
+different parties, with the singular and providential manner in which
+their crimes brought about their own punishment. No foreign
+interposition was necessary, no avenging angel was required to vindicate
+the justice of divine administration. They fell the victims of their own
+atrocity, of the passions which they themselves had let loose, of the
+injustice of which they had given the first example to others The
+Constitutionalists overthrew the ancient monarchy, and formed a limited
+government; but their imprudence in raising popular ambition paved the
+way for the tenth of August, and speedily brought themselves to the
+scaffold; the Girondists established their favored dream of a republic,
+and were the first victims of the fury which it excited; the Dantonists
+roused the populace against the Gironde, and soon fell under the axe
+which they had prepared for their rivals; the anarchists defied the
+power of 'heaven itself,' but scarce were their blasphemies uttered,
+when they were swept off by the partners of their bloody triumphs. One
+only power remained, alone, terrible, irresistible. This was the power
+of Death, wielded by a faction steeled against every feeling of
+humanity, dead to every principle of justice. In their iron hands, order
+resumed its sway from the influence of terror; obedience became
+universal, from the extinction of hope. Silent and unresisted, they led
+their victims to the scaffold, dreaded alike by the soldiers who
+crouched, the people who trembled, and the victims who suffered. The
+history of the world _has no parallel_ to that long night of suffering,
+because _it has none to the guilt which preceded it_; tyranny never
+assumed so hideous a form, because licentiousness never required so
+severe a punishment."
+
+Prom this awful description, which might be carried to almost any
+extent, the reader will understand the force of the prophecy which
+declared that the "sea became as the blood of a dead man, and every
+living soul died in the sea."
+
+ 4. And the third angel poured out his vial upon the rivers and
+ fountains of waters; and they became blood.
+
+ 5. And I heard the angel of the waters say, Thou art righteous,
+ O Lord, which art, and wast, and shalt be, because thou hast
+ judged thus.
+
+ 6. For they have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and thou
+ hast given them blood to drink; for they are worthy.
+
+ 7. And I heard another out of the altar say, Even so, Lord God
+ Almighty, true and righteous are thy judgments.
+
+Fountains and rivers are tributaries to the sea, and thus, they
+symbolize the inferior communities and nations belonging to the
+Apocalyptic earth. France was the great central power and the sea of
+revolution upon which the second vial descended. The surrounding nations
+were the rivers and fountains upon which the third was poured. It is not
+said of them that they became as the blood of a dead man, nor that every
+living thing in them died, but only that "they became blood." This
+symbol denotes the insurrections and desolating wars in which the
+nations of Europe were involved for a number of years, growing out of
+the French Revolution. I shall not here take time nor space to enter
+into the historical details relating to this statement; the facts are
+well known. "The blood-thirsty Jacobinism of France waged war not only
+upon its own monarchy, but sought to overturn all the thrones and
+fabrics of despotism in Europe. The same system of infidelity and
+atheism had been spread through the kingdoms there, though not to so
+great an extent as in France, and prepared the elements for revolution
+in them likewise." The French republic encouraged these agitations and
+by a unanimous decree of the Assembly, in 1792, set itself in open
+hostility with all the established governments of Europe. It was in
+these words: "The National Convention declares in the name of the French
+nation, that it will grant fraternity and assistance to all people who
+wish to recover their liberty; and it charges the executive power to
+send the necessary orders to the generals, to give succor to such
+people, and to defend those citizens who have suffered, or may suffer in
+the cause of liberty." "The Revolution, having accomplished its work in
+France, having there destroyed royal despotism, ... now set itself about
+fulfilling its early promise of giving liberty to all peoples. In a
+word, the revolutionists became propagandists. France now exhibits what
+her historians call her social, her communicative genius." Napoleon was
+right when he said that a revolution in France was sure to be followed
+by a revolution throughout Europe. "France conceived the idea that she
+had a Divine mission, as the great apostle of liberty, to propagate
+republicanism through all the kingdoms of Europe. In her madness of
+intoxication she undertook the work, threw down the gauntlet, and the
+fierce tocsin of war sounded from nation to nation, until the continent
+was converted into one vast battle-field."
+
+The "angel of the waters" signifies the angel that had charge of the
+vial of wrath poured out upon the rivers and fountains of waters. In
+full view of the awful plagues sent upon the inhabitants of earth, one
+grand thought seemed to occupy his mind--the righteousness of these
+judgments. It is not such a thought as humanity would have in mind when
+reading the history of these fearful convulsions of society, one scene
+of terror only preparing the way for another more horrible, until they
+would feel like closing the book and asking, "When will this awful night
+of horror be over? When will these avenging judgments cease?" These,
+however, were not the thoughts of this angel clothed in spotless
+garments; for, draining his vial to the dregs and forcing the nations to
+drink it, he said: "Thou art righteous, O Lord, which art, and wast, and
+shalt be, because thou hast judged thus. For they have shed the blood of
+saints and prophets, and thou hast given them _blood to drink_; for they
+are worthy." Truly, in this the Word of God is fulfilled, which says,
+"My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways." Isa.
+55:8. That class of people who represent God as a kind, loving Father
+only, one who will not take vengeance upon the objects of his own
+creation--let them visit in the pages of history these nations of
+Europe, scathed and blasted with the hot thunderbolts of divine wrath,
+until their minds sicken with horror at the sight of human agony and
+blood. In full view of these horrifying scenes let them hear the angel
+of the waters saying, "Thou art righteous, O Lord ... because thou hast
+judged thus; for they have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and
+thou hast given them blood to drink, for they are worthy"; while another
+voice from heaven, even from the altar, replies, "Even so, Lord God
+Almighty, _true and righteous_ are thy judgments"--and their theology
+must here break down.
+
+The thoughts just expressed confirm with certainty our interpretation of
+the "sea" and "rivers and fountains of waters" as signifying those
+nations which had been the persecutors of the saints, and show, also,
+the character of the divine judgments as being the shedding of their
+blood. They had shed the blood of saints and prophets, and now the same
+cup of wrath was placed to their lips, and they were forced to drink it
+to the dregs. God remembered the sighs and groans of his faithful
+followers; the cry of the martyrs for the avenging of their blood on
+"them that dwell on the earth" reached his ear; and now the time of
+retribution began.
+
+ 8. And the fourth angel poured out his vial upon the sun; and
+ power was given unto him to scorch men with fire.
+
+ 9. And men were scorched with great heat, and blasphemed the
+ name of God, which hath power over these plagues: and they
+ repented not to give him glory.
+
+The sun is the great central luminary of the earth, under whose genial
+light and warmth everything rejoices and develops in forms of beauty.
+When, however, a scorching power is given to his rays, the earth becomes
+as a furnace in which every green thing is burnt up. What the sun is to
+this world, such are the ruling powers to a kingdom; and power being
+given them to scorch as with fire denotes that the government would be
+administered, not for the good of the people, but for the purpose of
+oppression. A scorching sun, therefore, is a proper symbol of tyrant
+rulers.
+
+Still keeping in view the object of God in sending these first
+plagues--the punishment of the nations embraced within the territory of
+the ten former kingdoms of Europe--we are directed with certainty to the
+next great scourge that followed as a result of those already
+developed--the almost universal military empire of Napoleon. The success
+of three of the four greatest military leaders the world has ever
+seen--Alexander, Cæsar, and Charlemagne--has been so clearly predicted
+by inspiration that no believer in the truth of Revelation attempts to
+deny it; therefore it is not surprising that the fourth--Napoleon--
+should also be assigned a place in Apocalyptic vision: not so much
+because of his all-powerful military genius merely, but because of his
+mighty influence and effects upon the very nations that were especially
+made the subject of prophecy, as they stand connected with the history
+of God's people for centuries. At the close of the Revolution the French
+nation had not virtue nor religion necessary to remedy the evils under
+which they had long been suffering from the oppression of their
+monarchs; for when they undertook the work and demolished the throne,
+they let loose all the wildest elements of wrath to rage without
+restraint. The nation rejected God, and God rejected the nation. He gave
+them up to their own madness, to the fury of the most atrocious
+wickedness that was ever developed under heaven. "From the wild excesses
+and intolerable calamities of blood-red republicanism, the people were
+rejoiced at length to find a refuge in a gigantic military despotism,
+which became the terror and scourge of Europe." But the hand of God was
+in this thing, also. When the sun scorches the earth with burning heat,
+it is God that gives it its power. So Napoleon with his iron will and
+towering genius was only an instrument in God's hand for scourging the
+guilty nations. In the ordinary sense of the term Napoleon was not a
+tyrant to his own nation. Still, his government was a despotism to
+France; while to the Apocalyptic earth, or the ten kingdoms, he was a
+scorching sun, for his empire extended over the whole. It finally became
+a saying that "if Napoleon's cocked hat and gray coat should be raised
+on the cliffs of Boulogne, all Europe would run to arms." This agrees
+with the statement of the historian Judson, concerning the monarchs of
+Europe, that "the mere name of Napoleon was a dread to them." None of
+them could stand before his terrible onset. "Europe was shaken from end
+to end by such armies as the world had not seen since the days of
+Xerxes. Napoleon, whose hands were upheld by a score of distinguished
+marshals, performed the miracles of genius. His brilliant achievements
+still dazzle, while they amaze, the world." The crowns and scepters of
+Europe he held as play-things in his hand, to dispose of at pleasure.
+Says Wickes: "Never in the history of Christendom were ancient dynasties
+overthrown, and new ones created, kings made and unmade, within so short
+a period, as during the unparallelled career of this great conqueror. He
+had the crowns and kingdoms of all Europe in his gift, to settle as he
+pleased, or bestow as presents upon his relatives and friends. To his
+brother Jerome he gave the crown of Westphalia; to his brother Louis,
+the crown of Holland; to his brother Joseph, the kingdom of Spain; to
+his brother-in-law and general Murat, the kingdom of Naples; and others
+he conferred upon his favorite marshals."
+
+When he invaded Russia, a territory outside of the Apocalyptic earth, he
+exceeded his mission, and there met with the most terrible overthrow.
+Although he entered that kingdom with the most magnificent army that he
+had ever gathered together, yet for suffering and disaster that famous
+retreat from burning Moscow stands without a parallel in history. It was
+not the Russian armies that prevailed against him; it was God that
+fought against him with the blasts of his north wind. These speedily
+silenced those tremendous parks of artillery that had thundered upon the
+fields of Jena, Friedland, Wagram, Marengo and Austerlitz, and scattered
+those invincible battalions that had marched triumphant over Europe.
+Ney, at the head of the National Guards, ever before victorious, was
+compelled to beat a hasty retreat, glad to escape with the smallest
+remnant of his host. Napoleon failed here because God had given him no
+mission to perform in that territory.
+
+Concerning his ambition, the Encyclopædia Britannica says: "With a frame
+of iron, Napoleon could endure any hardships; and in war, in artillery
+especially and engineering, he stands unrivalled in the world's
+history.... He could not rest, and knew not when he had achieved
+success.... He succeeded in alienating the peoples of Europe, in whose
+behalf he pretended to be acting. And when they learned by bitter
+experience that he had absolutely no love for liberty, and encouraged
+equality only so long as it was an equality of subjects under his rule,
+they soon began to war against what was in fact a world-destroying
+military despotism." He was inspired with the most unbounded ambition,
+which was nothing short of despotism over all Europe, if not the world.
+Universal empire was his grand object, or, as it has been expressed by
+historians, a desire to concentrate "the world in Europe--Europe in
+France--France in Paris--Paris in _himself_." Says Wickes: "The empire
+which he actually reared in Europe was a vast, oppressive, centralized
+despotism.... To build it up, he desolated France through his terrible
+conscriptions, requiring the whole strength and flower of the nation to
+supply his armies. It is stated that after the wars of Napoleon there
+were three times the number of women in France that there were of men.
+The fathers, the husbands, the sons, the brothers, had fallen upon the
+battle-field, and thus desolated almost every household in the kingdom.
+Similar desolation also he carried by his wars into the other kingdoms."
+
+The dread of Napoleon settled down upon all the nations of Europe. They
+could not cope with his mighty genius, and therefore his presence was a
+terror to them. When the allied powers secured his first abdication, in
+1814, and sent him to the island of Elba, the desolating results of his
+long career were shown in the work that the Congress of Vienna was
+called upon to perform when it assembled in the fall of 1814. While the
+representatives of the powers were laboring to repair the damage that
+had been wrought and to adjust the territorial limitations of the
+various nations that had been altered or entirely demolished, the
+assemblage was suddenly surprised the following spring by the news that
+Napoleon had escaped from Elba and was enroute to Paris. The terror and
+consternation in Europe then experienced is shown by the following
+quotation from Sir James Mackintosh, a man of high reputation as a
+jurist, as a historian, and as a far-sighted and candid statesman:
+
+"Was it in the power of language to describe the evil! Wars which had
+raged for more than twenty years throughout Europe, which had spread
+blood and desolation from Cadiz to Moscow, and from Naples to
+Copenhagen; which had wasted the means of human enjoyment, and destroyed
+the instruments of social improvement; which threatened to diffuse among
+the European nations the dissolute and ferocious habits of a predatory
+soldiery ... had been brought to a close.... Europe seemed to breathe
+after her sufferings. In the midst of this fair prospect and of these
+consolatory hopes, Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from Elba; three small
+vessels reached the coast of Provence; their hopes are instantly
+dispelled; the work of our toil and fortitude is undone: the blood of
+Europe is spilled in vain."
+
+The bitterest ingredients in the cup of these nations was the
+humiliating overthrow of their own government and their subjection to
+the hated _republican_ despotism of France. It was a scorching sun that
+they could not endure. Still, they repented not to give God glory; they
+continued as before. After Napoleon had accomplished the purpose for
+which he was intended, God permitted this stupendous genius to be
+subdued; but it required the combined powers of Europe to secure his
+downfall.
+
+Creasy, in his Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World, says concerning
+the battle of Waterloo, "The great battle which ended the twenty-three
+years' war of the first French revolution, and which quelled the man
+whose genius and ambition had so long _disturbed and desolated the
+world_, deserves to be regarded by us ... with peculiar gratitude for
+the repose which it secured for us and for the greater part of the human
+race."
+
+ 10. And the fifth angel poured out his vial upon the seat of the
+ beast; and his kingdom was full of darkness; and they gnawed
+ their tongues for pain,
+
+ 11. And blasphemed the God of heaven because of their pains and
+ their sores, and repented not of their deeds.
+
+Under this vial the symbols differ somewhat. The "beast" is evidently
+the one of whom the image was made, referred to in verse 2--the Papacy.
+The seat that the Papacy occupied from the time the dragon resigned in
+favor of the beast (chap. 13:2) was his position of temporal power and
+authority. In the following chapter the Papacy is described as _seated_
+upon a ten-horned beast, the ten horns of which symbolized the kingdoms
+of Europe. In this position it was able to exercise a guiding influence
+over the European nations. We have already seen what great power the
+Popes exercised in this direction during the Dark Ages. But the "beast"
+of chapter 17 himself, as distinguished from his horns, symbolizes the
+Holy Roman Empire, which was a revival of the old empire of the Cæsars.
+This revived "world-empire" was closely allied to the Papacy. When
+Charlemagne, the Carlovingian king, restored the empire of the West, he
+was crowned "Emperor of the Romans" by Pope Leo III., A.D. 800. "The
+Popes made the descendants of Charles Martel kings and emperors; the
+grateful Frankish princes defended the Popes against all their enemies,
+imperial and barbarian, and dowering them with cities and provinces,
+laid the basis of their temporal sovereignty, which continued for more
+than a thousand years." After the decline of the Carlovingian power the
+imperial authority was again revived by Otto the Great (962), who was
+crowned Emperor of the Romans by the Pope. Henceforth the empire of the
+West was termed the _Holy Roman Empire_. "From this time on it was the
+rule that the German king who was crowned at Aachen had a right to be
+crowned ... emperor at Rome." So the general rule was that the Popes
+upheld the emperors, and the emperors sustained the Popes in their
+position as the spiritual heads of the church and as temporal rulers
+over the Papal states, which were granted them originally by the
+donations of Pepin and Charlemagne.
+
+In chapter 13 the civil powers of Europe and the ecclesiastical power of
+Rome are not shown by a double symbol--a woman and a beast--as in
+chapter 17, but are there represented by a combination of symbols drawn
+from the departments of human life and animal life, which shows that a
+politico-religious system is intended, as heretofore explained; hence
+the term _beast_, as there used, signifies either the Papacy or the
+civil power. Thus the term is used in the present chapter under
+consideration, and has reference here to the beast as an ecclesiastical
+power--the Papacy--and his "seat" refers to his temporal authority.
+
+This vial, then, being poured out upon his seat, with the result that
+his kingdom was filled with darkness--a symbol drawn from nature--points
+to the downfall of the Pope as a temporal ruler. Thus he would be
+deprived of his "seat."
+
+We have already seen that each plague prepares the way for a succeeding
+one. Under the reign of Napoleon the Holy Roman Empire was dissolved
+(1806). This was the beginning of the end of the Pope's temporal
+authority; for the two had in a great measure been for ages
+interdependent upon each other. Pius VII. was made a prisoner and the
+temporal sovereignty of the Roman See declared to be at an end; while
+the Pope himself was forced to disown all claim to rank as a temporal
+ruler. Of course, this was but a temporary overthrow; for when the
+period of Reaction came, the Pope recovered also temporal authority. But
+the vast territories of Avignon, Venaissin, Bologna, Ferrara, and the
+Romagna--representing fully _a third_ of all the Papal dominions--which
+had been forcibly ceded to France under Napoleon, was never restored to
+the Roman See. From that time the sun of the Pope's temporal kingdom
+rapidly approached the horizon; while the inhabitants of his dominions
+continued to blaspheme God through the atheistical Jacobinism that
+infested to so great an extent the whole mass of society--symbolized by
+their "sores"--and the firm supporters of Popery were filled with
+excessive chagrin and mortification of mind--symbolized by their
+"pains"--because the power of their leader, who professed temporal
+sovereignty over the whole earth, was being suddenly destroyed and his
+kingdom left in darkness. Concerning this matter the People's
+Cyclopædia, after speaking of the blow the Pope's spiritual supremacy
+received at the Reformation, says: "But in her relations to the State
+the Roman church has since passed through _a long and critical
+struggle_. The new theories _to which the French Revolution gave
+currency_ have still further modified these relations." In the second
+revolution of 1848 the Pope's temporal authority was about to be
+entirely destroyed by the attempted establishment of the republic of
+Italy; but at this juncture France, who, notwithstanding her plagues,
+had not repented of her former deeds, not willing to desert entirely the
+Papal cause after upholding it faithfully for centuries, interfered, and
+the Pope was sustained in his position by a French garrison until 1870
+(except a short time in 1867), at which time the success of King Victor
+Emmanuel and his capture of the Eternal City established the free
+government of United Italy. The temporal sun of the Pope set forever;
+his kingdom was left in darkness.
+
+ 12. And the sixth angel poured out his vial upon the great river
+ Euphrates; and the water thereof was dried up, that the way of
+ the kings of the east might be prepared.
+
+ 13. And I saw three unclean spirits like frogs come out of the
+ mouth of the dragon, and out of the mouth of the beast, and out
+ of the mouth of the false prophet.
+
+ 14. For they are the spirits of devils, working miracles, which
+ go forth unto the kings of the earth and of the whole world, to
+ gather them to the battle of that great day of God Almighty.
+
+ 15. Behold, I come as a thief. Blessed is he that watcheth, and
+ keepeth his garments, lest he walk naked, and they see his
+ shame.
+
+ 16. And he gathered them together into a place called in the
+ Hebrew tongue Armageddon.
+
+The symbols under this vial are so different that at first they scarcely
+look like anything constituting a plague. By recalling a few
+circumstances of history we shall understand why the river Euphrates was
+selected as a symbol, and also, its true signification in this
+connection. This river was connected with ancient Babylon, and while
+running in its own channel was the protection of the city and an
+obstacle to its capture. By turning the water of this river from its
+course, King Cyrus (according to the account given by Herodotus)
+succeeded in overthrowing the city, with the result that God's people
+who were at that time in captivity there received permission to return
+to their own land and to rebuild the house of God in Jerusalem. Ezra
+1:1-3. Under the sixth trumpet this symbol was applied to the four
+angels as a symbol of the restraint placed upon their operations, they
+being bound in that river. As there are no agents in this vision who are
+represented as bound, we must apply it to the city itself, the name of
+which is given in verse 19--Babylon--being a symbol of one of its
+defenses. According to verse 19 this mystical Babylon is composed of
+three parts, being made up of the dragon (in his modern form), the
+beast, and the false prophet mentioned in verse 13. And its location is
+not confined to the territory of the ten kingdoms; for its field of
+operations is not only that of the "earth"--the Apocalyptic earth--but
+"_of the whole world_." Ver. 14. In one division of this great city,
+that of the false prophet, God's people were long held in captivity; but
+its spiritual overthrow was to be accomplished by the drying up of the
+Euphrates of its defenses, that the way of the kings of the East might
+be prepared.[12]
+
+[Footnote 12: Applying the Euphrates (an object from nature) as a symbol
+of ecclesiastical affairs in this manner appears to be in violation of
+the laws of symbolic language laid down; but we should bear in mind the
+fact that events of whatever nature connected with the history of God's
+chosen people in the old dispensation are of themselves proper symbols
+of similar events in the New Testament dispensation. Thus the temple,
+altar, candle-sticks, incense, holy city, etc., of the former
+dispensation, although of themselves objects from nature, are
+nevertheless clearly used to represent affairs of the church, because of
+their former significance as connected with the people of God. The fact
+that the great city of this chapter is spiritual Babylon (see verse 19)
+is positive proof that the river Euphrates is here applied in the proper
+manner.]
+
+To the Hebrews the term _east_ had a much more extensive signification
+than with us, to whom its only distinction is that it is the point of
+the sun's rising. But beyond this, it was to the Jews the cardinal point
+of the compass to which they naturally looked first. Their temple was
+built toward the east, its principal entrance being in that direction.
+The most powerful and enlightened kingdoms of the world lay to the east
+of Judea, and they included them all under the general term, sons or
+children of the East (Orientals) and kings of the East, comprehending
+not only Arabia and the lands of Moab and Ammon, but also Armenia,
+Assyria, Mesopotamia, Babylonia and Chaldea. Travelers from these
+countries would all enter Judea from the east, and they were considered
+Orientals. These nations were also distinguished for their proficiency
+in science and learning. The Magi, or wise men of the East, came to
+worship the infant Jesus at Jerusalem. They were eminent in the science
+of astrology, which was considered the greatest science of that day. The
+East, therefore, was looked to for wise men; and it is a noticeable fact
+that the pathway of science, of literature, and of empire has ever been
+from that direction, so as to have passed into a proverb, "westward the
+star of empire holds its way." "The kings of the East," then, employed
+as a symbol of this sixth vial, is not intended to signify any persons
+literally from that quarter of the earth, but represents the bringing in
+of knowledge and understanding. Thank God that we live in the time when
+the defenses of spiritual Babylon have been broken through and when
+light and knowledge on the Word of God has reached the hearts of many
+redeemed souls held in bondage there! And like the Israelites of old,
+when Cyrus, entered the ancient Babylon through the dry river-bed of the
+Euphrates, they have come out with rejoicing and made their way to Zion
+again. Halleluiah! That the spiritual downfall of Babylon is a real
+plague to sectarians there can be no doubt, and it is plainly declared
+to be such in chap. 18:8, where the same event is described.
+
+At the very time when the defenses of Babylon are thrown down, the three
+unclean spirits like frogs come out of the mouth of the dragon
+(Paganism), and out of the mouth of the beast (Romanism), and out of the
+mouth of the false prophet (Protestantism), to gather together all the
+wicked powers throughout "the whole world" for that last great day of
+God Almighty.[13] There is no analagous object to which a _spirit_ can
+be made a symbol; therefore we must regard them as being literally
+spirits of devils, here appearing under their own appropriate title.
+Their mission is to form a confederation of all the gigantic powers of
+wickedness, slimy and loathsome as the animal to which they are likened,
+and to array themselves against the cause of Christ.
+
+[Footnote 13: I do not suppose that these three unclean spirits should
+be limited in their operations to Paganism, Romanism, and Protestantism;
+for that leaves out Mohammedanism, which is neither Pagan, Roman, nor
+Protestant, yet is certainly "false prophecy"; and the three spirits
+were to gather the "whole world."]
+
+Armageddon, where the spirits gathered all the enemies of truth and
+righteousness together, means the mountain of Megiddo, the memorable
+field of the overthrow of Sisera's mighty host by Barak. It was also the
+place of great defeat to the Israelites in the time of Josiah and the
+scene of his death. The name, therefore, stands as a symbol for a field
+of slaughter or defeat and denotes that when the confederation of
+wickedness is complete, the united host of God's enemies will be utterly
+defeated, as by the overthrow of Megiddo. This great conflict with
+powers of wickedness and spirits infernal will be further explained in
+chapter XX.
+
+Simultaneous with the notable events of this vial, the announcement is
+made of the near-coming of Christ to the world--"Behold I come as a
+thief. Blessed is he that watcheth, and keepeth his garments, lest he
+walk naked, and they see his shame." The children of God that have been
+gathered out of old Babylon rejoice in the glad announcement and say,
+"Even so come, Lord Jesus."
+
+ 17. And the seventh angel poured out his vial into the air; and
+ there came a great voice out of the temple of heaven, from the
+ throne, saying, It is done.
+
+ 18. And there were voices, and thunders, and lightnings; and
+ there was a great earthquake, such as was not since men were
+ upon the earth, so mighty an earthquake, and so great.
+
+ 19. And the great city was divided into three parts, and the
+ cities of the nations fell: and great Babylon came in
+ remembrance before God, to give unto her the cup of the wine of
+ the fierceness of his wrath.
+
+ 20. And every island fled away, and the mountains were not
+ found.
+
+ 21. And there fell upon men a great hail out of heaven, every
+ stone about the weight of a talent: and men blasphemed God
+ because of the plague of the hail; for the plague thereof was
+ exceeding great.
+
+The application of this vial to the judgments of the last great day is
+so plain that but little comment is here necessary. It was poured "into
+the air," a region of vast extent, not confined to a given locality, but
+embracing the whole earth. Hence this plague is universal. When the
+seventh angel emptied his vial, "There came a great voice out of the
+temple of heaven, from the throne, saying, It is done." All is now
+fulfilled. The work of wrath is finished. The description of the plague
+follows, but it follows only _as a description_. As actually
+accomplished, it preceded that great voice, which was uttered in view of
+the thing already brought to pass.
+
+The dissolution of the earth itself upon which we live is not here
+described, although according to the teaching of other scriptures it
+occurs at this time; but the symbols, being drawn from the department of
+the operations both of humanity and of nature, show the complete and
+final overthrow of all the great powers civil and ecclesiastical. The
+dominancy of these great powers has been the chief burden of Apocalyptic
+vision, and here their utter destruction at last is set forth under
+various symbols. The weight of the Jewish talent is said to have been
+one hundred and fourteen pounds. Such a mass of ice descending from
+heaven would beat down everything in its resistless, desolating fury.
+There is no intimation, however, of men being killed under this or the
+accompanying symbols; therefore as individuals they survive, while the
+storm of wrath falls upon the civil and ecclesiastical institutions of
+society, resulting in their utter annihilation. This is the "great day
+of his wrath" described under the sixth seal, to the symbols of which
+this description bears a striking resemblance, as any one can see at a
+glance. Well may the oppressors of earth say to the mountains and hills,
+"Fall on us, and hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the
+throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb: for the great day of his wrath
+is come; and who shall be able to stand?" Chap. 6:16, 17.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+ And there came one of the seven angels which had the seven
+ vials, and talked with me, saying unto me, Come hither; I will
+ show unto thee the judgment of the great whore that sitteth upon
+ many waters:
+
+ 2. With whom the kings of the earth have committed fornication,
+ and the inhabitants of the earth have been made drunk with the
+ wine of her fornication.
+
+ 3. So he carried me away in the spirit into the wilderness: and
+ I saw a woman sit upon a scarlet colored beast, full of names of
+ blasphemy, having seven heads and ten horns.
+
+ 4. And the woman was arrayed in purple and scarlet color, and
+ decked with gold and precious stones and pearls, having a golden
+ cup in her hand full of abominations and filthiness of her
+ fornication:
+
+ 5. And upon her forehead was a name written, MYSTERY, BABYLON
+ THE GREAT, THE MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH.
+
+ 6. And I saw the woman drunken with the blood of the saints, and
+ with the blood of the martyrs of Jesus: and when I saw her, I
+ wondered with great admiration.
+
+Here again the narrative returns to take up another series of the
+history. A number of times we have been taken over the same ground. It
+is this feature of the Apocalypse more than any other that has misled
+and perplexed commentators. Attempting to explain it as one continuous
+narrative from beginning to end, they have been compelled to consider
+numerous passages as "digressions," "parentheses," or "episodes," etc.
+As already observed, however, the prophecy is not arranged after the
+ordinary plan of histories, narrating all the contemporaneous events in
+a given period, whether civil, religious, literary, scientific, or
+biographical, thus finishing up the history of that period; but it
+consists of a number of distinct themes running over the same ground.
+
+In this chapter a more particular description of the church of Rome,
+"that great city which reigneth over the kings of the earth" (verse 18),
+is given under the symbol of a drunken harlot. With this vile prostitute
+"the kings of the earth have committed fornication"--they have
+encouraged her in her corruption and idolatries--"and the inhabitants of
+the earth have been made drunk with the wine of her fornication." This
+latter symbol is doubtless taken from the cup of drugged wine with which
+lewd women were accustomed to inflame their lovers. So had this apostate
+church made "the inhabitants of the earth"--of the ten kingdoms--drunken
+with her wine-cup and thus rendered them willing partakers in her
+abominable idolatries. She is described in two positions--first, as
+"sitting upon many waters," which the angel informs us "are peoples, and
+multitudes, and nations, and tongues" (verse 15); and second, "upon a
+scarlet-colored beast, full of names of blasphemy, having seven heads
+and ten horns." The first position denotes her wide supremacy in the
+world over distant peoples and nations; the second, the close
+relationship that she sustained to the civil power. That beast carried
+her in royal state. The civil powers of Europe have usually lent
+themselves as a caparisoned hack for this great whore to ride upon and
+have considered themselves highly honored thereby. This beast was full
+of the names of blasphemy, which were the same as the blasphemous
+assumptions of the Papacy, as explained in chapter XIII, showing that he
+agreed perfectly with this apostate church in her impious claims and
+supported her in them, making himself equally guilty and deserving of
+the same name. What is intended exactly by his scarlet color I do not
+know. The same power under its Pagan form was represented as a red
+dragon.
+
+The appearance of this woman was that of the most splendid character,
+nor are we to suppose the contrary because she was such an infamous
+prostitute. She may have been, and according to the description was, all
+that, but still her appearance was such as to bewitch her admirers and
+votaries. Robes of purple and scarlet, with the most costly profusion of
+gold and diamonds, were superb adorning, even regal splendor. All that
+skill and wealth could do in magnificence of attire was bestowed upon
+her to set forth her charms. The "golden cup in her hand" was as to
+richness in harmony with her dress, while as to contents it set forth
+her character, for it was "full of abominations and filthiness of her
+fornication." This cup was an appropriate symbol of her atrocious
+wickedness and idolatries.
+
+This woman had also a name written on her forehead. It was not, indeed,
+placed there by herself nor by her admirers; but He who drew this
+symbolic picture placed it there that all might know her true character.
+"MYSTERY, BABYLON THE GREAT, THE MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND ABOMINATIONS OF
+THE EARTH." Although this apostate church was only in embryo in the
+apostles' day, yet the apostle who gave us a careful delineation of its
+terrible characteristics declared that it was then developing and
+denominated it a _mystery_. "The mystery of iniquity doth already work."
+2 Thes. 2:7. The same apostle regarded as an unquestionable fact that
+_godliness_ was a mystery (1 Tim. 3:16); but he who peruses the history
+of the Papacy will be forced to declare with emphasis, "Without
+controversy great is the mystery of Romanism." She is also styled
+Babylon the Great. This name is derived from ancient Babylon. This city
+was the center of the earth's idolatry and stood first of all as the
+direct enemy of God's people. So, likewise, this church is the center of
+earth's spiritual idolatry. There are other harlots, or corrupt
+churches, in the world beside her; but she is the _mother_ of them all.
+They are all children by her side. Some of them greatly honor her and in
+deep veneration call her "_our holy mother church_;" but God brands her
+as the "mother of harlots and abominations of the earth."
+
+But the statement that she was a harlot merely, does not entirely
+describe her character. She was a _drunken_ harlot. Drunken with
+what--wine? No indeed; that were a very small sin for her. She was
+"drunken with the blood of the saints, and with the blood of the martyrs
+of Jesus." Romanists positively declare that their church never
+persecutes; but with the picture of this drunken prostitute before our
+eyes, we shall be hard to convince. To illustrate this point fully would
+be to write a book of martyrs much larger than the present work; so, for
+lack of space only, we shall have to content ourselves with merely
+bringing forward a few of many historical proofs showing _that they
+themselves_ claim the right to exterminate heretics.
+
+Innumerable provincial and national councils have issued the most cruel
+and bloody laws for the extermination of the Waldenses and other
+so-called heretics; such as the Councils of Oxford, Toledo, Avignon,
+Tours, Lavaur, Albi, Narbonne, Beziers, Tolosa, etc. Since Papists will
+assert that these had no authority to establish a doctrine of the church
+(although they clearly reflect its spirit), I remind the reader that
+some of their _General_ Councils have by their decrees pronounced the
+punishment of death for heresy. At least six of these highest judicial
+assemblies of the Romish church, with the Pope at their head, have
+authoritatively enjoined the persecution and extermination of heretics.
+Extracts from the Acts of these Councils could be given if space
+permitted. 1. The second General Council of Lateran (1139), in its
+twenty-third canon. 2. The third General Council of Lateran (1179),
+under Pope Alexander III. 3. The fourth General Council of Lateran
+(1215), under the inhuman Pope Innocent III., which exceeded in ferocity
+all similar decrees that had preceded it. 4. The sixteenth General
+Council, held at Constance in 1414. This Council, with Pope Martin
+present in person, condemned the reformers Huss and Jerome to be burned
+at the stake and then prevailed on the emperor Sigismund to violate the
+safe-conduct that he had given Huss, signed by his own hand, in which he
+guaranteed the reformer a safe return to Bohemia; and the inhuman
+sentence was carried out, with the haughty prelates standing by to
+satiate their eyes on the sight of human agony. This council also
+condemned the writings of Wickliffe and _ordered his bones to be dug up
+and burnt_, which savage sentence was afterwards carried into effect;
+and after lying in their grave for forty years, the remains of this
+first translator of the English Bible were reduced to ashes and thrown
+into the brook Swift. Well has the historian Fuller said, in reference
+to this subject, "The brook Swift did convey his ashes into Avon, the
+Avon into Severn, the Severn into the narrow seas, and they into the
+main ocean. And thus the ashes of Wickliffe are the emblem of his
+doctrie, which is now dispersed all over the world." 5. The Council of
+Sienna (1423), which was afterwards continued at Basil. 6. The fifth
+General Council of the Lateran (1514). The laws enacted in each
+succeeding Council were generally marked, if possible, with augmented
+barbarity.
+
+Says the learned Edgar, in his Variations of Popery: "The principle of
+persecution, being sanctioned not only by theologians, Popes and
+provincial synods but also by General Councils, _is a necessary and
+integral part of Romanism_. The Romish communion has, by its
+representatives, declared its right to compel men to renounce heterodoxy
+and embrace Catholicism, and to consign the obstinate to the civil power
+to be banished, tortured, or killed." St. Aquinas, whom Romanists call
+the "angelic Doctor," says, "Heretics are to be compelled by corporeal
+punishments, that they may adhere to the faith." Again, "Heretics may
+not only be excommunicated, but _justly killed_." He says that "the
+church consigns such to the secular judges _to be exterminated from the
+world by death_."
+
+Cardinal Bellarmine is the great champion of Romanism and expounder of
+its doctrines. He was the nephew of Pope Marcellus, and he is
+acknowledged to be a standard writer with Romanists. In the twenty-first
+and twenty-second chapters of the third book of his work entitled _De
+Laicis_, he enters into a regular argument to prove that the church has
+the right, and should exercise it, of punishing heretics with death. The
+heading is his, together with what follows.
+
+"Chapter XXI. _That heretics, condemned by the church, may be punished
+with temporal penalties and even death._ We will briefly show that the
+church has the _power and ought_ to cast off incorrigible heretics,
+especially those who have elapsed, and that the secular power ought to
+inflict on such temporal punishments and even death itself. 1. This may
+be proved from the Scripture. 2. It is proved from the opinions and laws
+of the emperors, _which the church has always approved_. 3. _It is
+proved by the laws of the church ... experience proves that there is no
+other remedy;_ for the church has tried step by step all remedies--first
+excommunication alone; then pecuniary penalties; afterward banishment;
+_and lastly has been forced to put them to death; to send them to their
+own place_.... There are three grounds on which reason shows that
+heretics should be put to death: the first is, Lest the wicked should
+injure the righteous; second, That by the punishment of a few many may
+be reformed. For many who were made torpid by impunity, are _roused by
+the fear of punishment_; AND THIS WE DAILY SEE IS THE RESULT WHERE THE
+INQUISITION FLOURISHES," etc.
+
+"Chapter XXII. _Objections answered._ It remains to answer the
+objections of Luther and other heretics. Argument 1. From the history of
+the church at large. 'The church,' says Luther, 'from the beginning even
+to this time, _has never burned a heretic_. Therefore it does not seem
+to be the mind of the Holy Spirit that they should be burnt!' [He surely
+misunderstood Luther.] I reply that this argument proves not the
+sentiment, but the ignorance, or impudence of Luther; FOR AS ALMOST AN
+INFINITE NUMBER WERE EITHER BURNED OR OTHERWISE PUT TO DEATH, Luther
+either did not know it, and was therefore ignorant; or if he knew it, he
+is convicted of impudence and falsehood,--for _that heretics were often
+burnt_ BY THE CHURCH may be proved by adducing a few from many examples.
+Argument 2. 'Experience shows that terror is not useful.' I reply
+EXPERIENCE PROVES THE CONTRARY--for the Donatists, Manicheans, and
+Albigenses WERE ROUTED AND ANNIHILATED BY ARMS," etc.
+
+So this high dignitary of the Catholic church, a cardinal, a nephew of
+one Pope and the special favorite of others, freely admits the charge so
+often laid to Popery by creditable historians--the butchering of an
+"infinite number" of people that differed from them--and here labors
+hard to uphold it as a principle of righteousness. Their bloody crusades
+against the innocent, unoffending Waldenses, Albigenses, and other
+peoples, in which thousands, and in the aggregate _millions_, were
+slaughtered like venomous reptiles, stand out on the page of history
+with a prominence that can not be mistaken; and they themselves can not
+deny it. Dowling has well said that their "history is written in lines
+of blood. Compared with the butcheries of holy men and women by the
+Papal Antichrist, the persecutions of the Pagan emperors of the first
+three centuries sink into comparative insignificance. For not a tithe of
+the blood of martyrs was shed by Paganism, that has been poured forth by
+Popery; and the persecutors of Pagan Rome never dreamed of the thousand
+ingenious contrivances of torture which the malignity of Popish
+inquisitors succeeded in inventing." P. 541.
+
+If any of my readers suppose that the character of Popery has changed
+with the lapse of ages, I must tell you that such is not the ease.
+Popery is unchangeable and this her ablest advocates declare. Chas.
+Butler, in the work he wrote in reply to Southey's book of the church,
+says, "It is most true that the Roman Catholics believe the doctrines of
+their church to be unchangeable; and that it is a tenet of their creed,
+that what their faith ever has been, such it was from the beginning,
+_such it is now_, and SUCH IT EVER WILL BE." A copy of the eleventh
+edition of The Faith of Our Fathers, published in Baltimore, Maryland,
+in 1883, lies before me. It was written by Archbishop (now Cardinal)
+James Gibbons, the highest authority of the Roman Catholic church in
+this country. In page 95 he says: "It is a marvelous fact, worthy of
+record, that in the whole history of the church, from the nineteenth
+century to the first, no solitary example can be adduced to show that
+any Pope or General Council ever revoked a decree of faith or morals
+enacted by any preceding pontiff or council. Her record in the past
+ought to be a sufficient warrant that she will _tolerate no doctrinal
+variations in the future_." So the doctrine of her inherent right to
+persecute and slay every one who disagrees with her, which has been
+enacted by Pontiffs and General Councils and so carried out in the past,
+is still in vogue and would now be enforced were it in her power to do
+so.
+
+While this statement of Gibbons' shows the unchangeable spirit of
+Popery, still it is the basest presumption upon the historical knowledge
+of the reader. The facts are that the _official_ acts of some of their
+Popes and General Councils have been so far wrong that Romanists
+themselves have been compelled to admit it. Thus the _sixth_ General
+Council, which was held at Constantinople in 680, and which every
+Catholic accepts as Ecumenical, condemned, in the strongest terms, Pope
+Honorius as a Monothelite _heretic_. Let them attempt to deny it, and we
+will bring forward our proof. Romish authors themselves admit it, the
+well-known Dupin with the rest, as appears by the following extract from
+his writings: "The Council had as much reason to censure him as Sergius,
+Paulus, Peter, and the other Patriarchs o£ Constantinople." He adds in
+language yet more emphatic, "This will stand for certain, then, that
+Honorius _was condemned_, AND JUSTLY TOO, AS A HERETIC, by the sixth
+General Council." Dupin's Eccl. History, Vol. II, p. 16.
+
+The Decretals of Isodore furnish another example of Papal infallibility
+(?). For ages these documents were the chief instrument of the Popes in
+extending their power and the proof of the righteousness of their
+assumptions to excessive temporal authority. Wickliffe declared them
+false and apocryphal. For this he was condemned by the sixteenth
+_General Council_, held at Constance in 1414, and his bones ordered dug
+up and burnt because of his daring impudence. The spurious character of
+these false decretals have since been proved beyond the shadow of a
+doubt; and since it is impossible to deny it longer, it is admitted even
+by Romanists. So, after all, this _infallible_ Council was wrong, the
+Papists themselves being the judges.
+
+Pope Benedict IX. was guilty of such flagitious crimes that he became an
+object of public abhorrence, and he finally _sold_ the Popedom. One of
+his infallible (?) successors in the Papal chair, Pope Victor III.,
+pronounced this infallible (?) profligate a person "abandoned to all
+manner of vice. A _successor of_ SIMON THE SORCERER, and NOT OF SIMON
+THE APOSTLE." I do not question the truth of this assertion, but what
+becomes of their boasted uninterrupted apostolical succession? Baronius,
+the Popish annalist, confesses that Pope Sergius III. was "the slave of
+every vice, and the most wicked of men." Among other horrid acts Platina
+relates that he _rescinded the acts_ of Pope Formosus, compelled those
+whom he had ordained to be re-ordained, dragged his dead body from the
+sepulchre, beheaded him as though he were alive, and then threw him into
+the Tiber! This Pope cohabited with an infamous prostitute named Marozia
+and by her had a son named John, who afterwards ascended the Papal
+throne, through the influence of his licentious mother, under the name
+of John XI. So the unlawful amours of Sergius produced this infallible,
+necessary link in the _holy_ chain of uninterrupted apostolical
+succession! It must be remembered, also, that the Popes have for ages
+laid claim themselves to infallibility; and in the last General Council
+of that body, held at the Vatican in 1870, it was declared a dogma of
+the church. Romanists will tell us that this decree refers only to his
+official acts, and not to his personal character; but official acts have
+been the main thing under consideration in the case of Sergius,
+Honorius, and Benedict. But if such monsters of vice can produce good,
+holy, infallible acts, as Papists declare, then Jesus Christ is
+mistaken; for he declared positively that "a corrupt tree _bringeth
+forth evil fruit_ ... neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good
+fruit." Mat. 7:17, 18. "God forbid: yea, let God be true, but every man
+a liar." Rom. 3:4. During these dark ages thousands of priests, who were
+by the laws of the church denied their Scriptural right of possessing a
+wife (1 Cor. 7:9, etc.), lived openly with concubines; and the Council
+of Toledo decreed that they should not be condemned therefor, provided
+they were content with one.
+
+But the devil produced his master-piece of iniquity in the person of
+Roderic Borgia, who ascended the Papal throne in 1492 under the name of
+Alexander VI. The utmost limits assigned to Papal depravity were
+realized in him, so that the very name Borgia has come to be used as a
+designation of any person unusually wicked. Says Waddington: "The
+ecclesiastical records of fifteen centuries ... contain no name so
+loathsome, no crimes so foul as his.... Not one among the many zealous
+annalists of the Roman church has breathed a whisper in his praise....
+He publicly cohabited with a Roman matron named Vanozia, by whom he had
+five acknowledged children. Neither in his manners nor in his language
+did he affect any regard for morality or decency; and one of the
+earliest acts of his pontificate was, to celebrate, with scandalous
+magnificence, in his own palace, the marriage of his daughter Lucretia.
+On one occasion this prodigy of vice gave a splendid entertainment,
+within the walls of the Vatican, to no less than fifty public
+prostitutes at once, and that in the presence of his daughter Lucretia,
+at which entertainment deeds of darkness were done, over which decency
+must throw a veil; and yet this monster of vice was, according to Papist
+... the vicar of God upon earth, and was addressed by the title of HIS
+HOLINESS!!" But why stir this cesspool of filth any longer? Is not that
+church of which Alexander VI. was for eleven years the crowned and
+anointed head--a necessary link in the boasted chain of _holy_
+apostolical succession, the pretended vicar of Christ upon earth--is it
+not, I ask, fitly described by the pen of inspiration "MOTHER OF HARLOTS
+AND ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH," as she reeled onward in the career of
+ages, "drunken with the blood of the saints"?
+
+ 7. And the angel said unto me, Wherefore didst thou marvel? I
+ will tell thee the mystery of the woman, and of the beast that
+ carriest her, which hath the seven heads and ten horns.
+
+ 8. The beast that thou sawest was, and is not; and shall ascend
+ out of the bottomless pit, and go into perdition: and they that
+ dwell on the earth shall wonder, whose names were not written in
+ the book of life from the foundation of the world, when they
+ behold the beast that was, and is not, and yet is.
+
+ 9. And here is the mind which hath wisdom. The seven heads are
+ seven mountains, on which the woman sitteth.
+
+ 10. And there are seven kings; five are fallen, and one is, and
+ the other is not yet come; and when he cometh, he must continue
+ a short space.
+
+ 11. And the beast that was, and is not, even he is the eighth,
+ and is of the seven, and goeth into perdition.
+
+ 12. And the ten horns which thou sawest are ten kings, which
+ have received no kingdom as yet; but receive power as kings one
+ hour with the beast.
+
+ 13. These have one mind, and shall give their power and strength
+ unto the beast.
+
+ 14. These shall make war with the Lamb, and the Lamb shall
+ overcome them: for he is Lord of lords, and King of kings: and
+ they that are with him are called, and chosen, and faithful.
+
+The angel promises to explain "the mystery of the woman and of the beast
+that carried her." The beast is the same as the secular beast with seven
+heads and ten horns, described in chapter 13. An explanation of its
+heads and horns has already been given. The expression "the seven heads
+are seven mountains, on which the woman sitteth, and there are seven
+kings," requires further explanation. Many have understood the mountains
+to signify the seven mountains on which the city of Rome is said to be
+built; but that is adopting the literal mode of interpretation, and is
+contrary to the laws of symbolic language. The more obvious meaning is
+that the seven heads represent seven mountains and also seven kings; but
+this probably is not the idea intended. The heads of a beast are not the
+proper symbol of mountains. The fact, too, that the woman is represented
+as sitting upon these mountains, shows that they are to be taken as a
+symbol, as well as the woman, and not the object symbolized. They are,
+then, the same as the heads and denote the seven kings or seven forms of
+government under which the Roman empire subsisted.
+
+The seventh and last head has not yet been identified. Before
+considering it, however, I wish to call attention to another point that
+has already been referred to. The beast that John here saw, with the
+seven heads and ten horns, was Rome under the Papal power. Did new Rome
+in reality have the seven heads? No. The dragon John saw in chapter 12
+is represented as having seven heads and ten horns, and signified Rome
+under the Pagan power. Did old Rome really possess the ten horns? No.
+According to verse 12 in this chapter, they were to arise future of
+John's time. But notice carefully that the seven heads, which according
+to this description, belonged to the beast sustaining the Papal power in
+after years, are here explained by the angel as signifying the very
+forms of government by which _Pagan_ Rome subsisted. "Five _are fallen_
+[a past event], one _is_ [exists at this present time], and the other
+_is not yet come_." So according to divine interpretation, the same
+heads and horns serve for both the dragon and the beast. This could not
+possibly be a true representation unless they were both in reality the
+_same beast_, they being represented as two only for the purpose of
+describing the two phases of Roman history--Pagan and Papal.
+
+With this point established, that these two forms of Roman history are
+the same beast, we are now prepared to understand the statement that the
+beast "was and is not, and yet is." This is equivalent to saying that
+the beast existed, it ceased to exist, and then it came into existence
+again. This was exactly the history of Rome. Its downfall under the
+Pagan form was described under the fourth trumpet as an eclipse of the
+sun, moon and stars, so that they shone not for a third part of the day
+and night. For a time it seemed not to exist. A little later the eclipse
+is lifted; the beast exists again under the Papal form. In this is set
+forth clearly the wounding and the healing of the beast. The wound was
+inflicted on its sixth, or Imperial, head (for the first five had
+already fallen, according to the historical facts just related), being
+accomplished by the hordes of Northern barbarians overturning the empire
+of the West. It appeared for a time that the beast was indeed wounded
+unto death; but not so: to the surprise of all, he survived under the
+form of the seventh head. At this point the question is sure to be
+asked, How could the beast continue to live if its seventh head was to
+continue but "a short space"? This is accounted for by the fact that
+there was what might be appropriately called an eighth head, but which
+was in reality of the seven. "And the beast that was, and is not, even
+he is the eighth, and is of the seven." Verse 11.
+
+The identification of the seventh head will now make the matter
+complete. The facts all meet in the Carlovingian empire, or the empire
+of Charlemagne. In the year 774 Charlemagne completed the work begun by
+Pepin twenty years before and overthrew the kingdom of the Lombards in
+Italy, which was the last of the three horns plucked up before the
+little horn of Daniel. By this victory he became complete master of
+Italy, and he received the title Patrician of Rome. This was not merely
+an honorary title, such as had for ages been conferred upon certain
+individuals; but it was a distinct form of civil government and supreme,
+taking the same rank with that of the Consular, the Decemvirate, the
+Triumvirate, etc., in the earlier history of the nation. It lasted,
+however, only "a short space," or twenty-six years, when Charlemagne,
+having extended his conquests over all the western part of Europe,
+assumed the Imperial title and thus revived the empire of Rome in the
+West under its Gothic form. In his Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,
+Gibbon says: "In the twenty-six years that elapsed between the conquest
+of Lombardy and his Imperial coronation, Rome, which had been delivered
+by the sword, was subject, as his own, to the scepter, of Charlemagne.
+The people swore allegiance to his person and family; in his name, money
+was coined, and justice was administered, and the election of Popes was
+examined and confirmed by his authority--except an original and
+self-inherent claim of sovereignity, there was not any prerogative
+remaining which the title of emperor could add to the Patrician of
+Rome." This decisive testimony by the highest authority on the subject
+shows conclusively that all the power of sovereignty resided in
+Charlemagne as the Patrician of Rome, and that this, therefore, is a
+proper head to be ranked with the other six that preceded it.[14]
+
+[Footnote 14: Commentators frequently identify the seventh head with the
+Exarchate of Ravenna. After the overthrow of the kingdom of the
+Ostrogoths in Italy by Belisarius, the general of Justinian, about the
+middle of the sixth century, the territory became subject to the emperor
+of the Eastern empire and was ruled by him through an Exarch whose place
+of residence was Ravenna. This Exarchate (sometimes called _Patriciate_)
+continued until about the middle of the eighth century, when it was
+terminated by Astolphus, king of the Lombards, who made Ravenna the
+capital of the Lombardic kingdom in 752. Three years later the Lombards
+were defeated by Pepin, who made the Holy See a present of the lands he
+conquered from them--the origin of the temporal power of the Popes.
+Pepin was succeeded by his son Charlemagne, who was appointed
+_Patrician_ of Rome, by the Pope, in 774. During the last half century
+that the Exarchate of Ravenna remained its existence was but little more
+than a name, the real power of government being usurped by the Papacy.
+It could hardly be considered an inconsistency were we to interpret the
+seventh head as signifying both the Patriciate of Ravenna and the
+Patriciate of Charlemagne that closely followed it; but in the present
+work I have restricted its application to the latter form because of its
+distinctive characteristic as constituting a supreme civil power
+entirely independent of the empire of the East, and because of its
+importance in the revival of the empire of the West.]
+
+This head, however, continued only "a short space"; and an eighth arose
+on Christmas, the first day of the year 800 (as time was then reckoned),
+when Charlemagne was crowned emperor of Rome, and thus revived the
+empire of the West. This eighth head, however, was "of the seven"; for
+it was the same as the sixth, both being Imperial--the first being in
+the Augustan line, and the other in the Carlovingian, and separated from
+each other by the seventh, or Patriciate. Considered one way, there were
+eight heads, but two of them were alike, hence only seven; for the
+eighth was of the seven. According to verse 11 it was under the eighth
+head that the beast subsisted at the time he was carrying the woman of
+this chapter, which exactly accords with the historical facts in the
+case; and the same was continued in a line of emperors reaching down to
+the time of the French Revolution.
+
+The ten horns had "received no kingdom as yet." This signifies that at
+the time when the Revelation was given they had not yet arisen. When
+they did come into existence they were to receive power as kings with
+the beast and were to give to it their power and strength. It is a
+singular fact that a distinct head should continue to exist after these
+horns had arisen and developed into powerful kingdoms; but herein the
+remarkable accuracy of prophecy is clearly shown. It is said that they
+should make war with the Lamb and that the Lamb should overcome them.
+Some think that this has reference to the persecution of the saints
+during the Dark Ages; but it seems to me that it would have been stated
+differently if such were its meaning. It may be a prophetical reference
+to the battle of Armageddon, which will be terminated by the coming of
+the Son of God himself to overthrow completely all the powers of
+wickedness.
+
+ 15. And he saith unto me, The waters which thou sawest, where
+ the whore sitteth, are peoples, and multitudes, and nations, and
+ tongues.
+
+ 16. And the ten horns which thou sawest upon the beast, these
+ shall hate the whore, and shall make her desolate and naked, and
+ shall eat her flesh, and burn her with fire.
+
+ 17. For God hath put in their hearts to fulfil his will, and to
+ agree, and give their kingdom unto the beast, until the words of
+ God shall be fulfilled.
+
+ 18. And the woman which thou sawest is that great city, which
+ reigneth over the kings of the earth.
+
+The special thoughts contained in these verses have been so far
+explained already that it is unnecessary to go over the same ground
+again. Already the civil powers of Europe are beginning to cast this
+woman aside as an old, wrinkled, haggard prostitute is cast off by her
+lovers. Already they have deprived her of all temporal authority such as
+she possessed in guiding this beast of chapter 17, as explained under
+the fifth plague in the preceding chapter. Whether they are destined to
+become a still greater enemy to her, the future will determine.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+ And after these things I saw another angel come down from
+ heaven, having great power; and the earth was lightened with his
+ glory.
+
+ 2. And he cried mightily with a strong voice, saying, Babylon
+ the great is fallen, is fallen, and is become the habitation of
+ devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of every
+ unclean and hateful bird.
+
+ 3. For all nations have drunk of the wine of the wrath of her
+ fornication, and the kings of the earth have committed
+ fornication with her, and the merchants of the earth are waxed
+ rich through the abundance of her delicacies.
+
+A movement of mighty power is symbolized in these verses. The chronology
+of the events described in the preceding chapter brings us down to the
+time when the ten horns turn against the Papacy by depriving her of her
+temporal authority. This, as we have already seen, was completely
+fulfilled in 1870 and constituted the fifth plague. In the description
+of the sixth plague which followed, it was shown that the great city
+which was invaded was composed of three parts--Paganism (the modern form
+of the dragon power), Catholicism, and Protestantism. The same great
+city is here brought to view, and the angel from heaven, with a mighty
+voice, cries, "Babylon the Great is fallen, is fallen." This fall of
+Babylon can not signify a literal destruction; for there are certain
+events to take place in Babylon after her fall which entirely precludes
+that idea; for instance, the calling of God's people out of her, in
+order that they may not receive of her plagues. In these plagues is
+embraced her literal destruction, or complete overthrow. The fall is
+therefore a moral one; for the result of it is that Babylon becomes "the
+habitation of devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of
+every unclean and hateful bird."
+
+Protestants who make any attempt to interpret these prophecies usually
+limit the designation "Babylon the Great" in these verses to the church
+of Rome, because the woman symbolizing the apostate church in the
+preceding chapter is denominated "Babylon the Great." Ver. 5. But the
+same verse also declares her to be the "_Mother_ of harlots;" and if she
+as a degraded woman stands as the representative of a corrupt church,
+her unchaste daughters, also, must symbolize churches that are her
+descendants; and if the real name of the _mother_ is Babylon, as stated,
+the proper name of her harlot daughters must be Babylon also. Whether,
+therefore, the mother or the daughters are referred to, it is all
+"Babylon the Great," because it is all the same family and is a part of
+that "GREAT CITY which reigneth over the kings of the earth." Chap.
+17:18. We must, therefore, have something besides the mere title
+"Babylon the Great" to determine which division of the great city is
+referred to in a given instance--whether Pagan, Papal, or Protestant.
+
+A careful study of the prophecy now under consideration will show that
+it has particular reference to the Protestant division of Babylon. It
+contained many of God's children; whereas Paganism was always a false
+religion and never held any of God's saints. Under the reign of
+Catholicism, the people of God are represented in all the symbols of
+this book relating thereto as existing entirely separate from that
+communion. The description of this apostate church given in the
+preceding chapter shows clearly that instead of being partly composed of
+God's saints, she was their most bitter and relentless persecutor, yea,
+was "_drunken with the blood of the saints_, and with the blood of the
+martyrs of Jesus." This is definite proof that the present phase of
+Babylon under consideration is the Protestant division; and her moral
+fall is the grand signal for the escape of God's people who have partly
+composed her number, as the fall of ancient Babylon was for the escape
+of the Israelites. In their younger days the Protestant organizations
+(symbolized by the daughters) were of much better character than the
+mother church from whom they descended. Many of them started out on
+reform. While a spiritual people, God worked with them; but when they
+made their image to the beast, they suddenly declined, and this voice
+from heaven finally declares them to be in a fallen condition--entirely
+void of salvation, except a very few chosen saints that have not defiled
+their garments, contained therein.
+
+That this application of the term _Babylon_ is correct, and also, the
+fallen condition ascribed to her in accordance with the facts, I will
+prove by the following testimonies of Protestants themselves. The first
+is from Vision of the Ages; or, Lectures on the Apocalypse, by B.W.
+Johnson, member of the Christian sect.
+
+"It is needful to inquire what the term _Babylon_ means. It occurs
+several times in the New Testament. Here (in the Apocalypse) it is
+spoken of as 'that great city,' and her fall is doomed 'because she hath
+made all nations drunk with the wine of her fornication.' In Rev. 17:5,
+a scarlet harlot is seen sitting upon the seven-headed and ten-horned
+monster, and upon her forehead is written, 'Mystery, Babylon the Great.'
+With this woman the kings of the earth are said to have committed
+fornication. In chapter 18 the fall of the great city, Babylon is
+detailed at length, and it is again said that all the kings of the earth
+have committed fornication with her. The harlot with Babylon stamped on
+her brow, and the great city of fornication styled Babylon, in chapters
+14 and 18, are one and the same existence.
+
+"There is an ancient city of Babylon often mentioned in the Old
+Testament, but ages before John wrote, it had ceased to be inhabited,
+the only dwellers among its lonely ruins were howling beasts and hissing
+serpents. It has never been rebuilt to this day and has passed away
+forever. John refers therefore not to old Babylon, but to some power yet
+unseen (when he was upon the earth), that should be revealed in due
+time, and of which old Babylon was a symbol. Let us notice some of the
+features of ancient Babylon.
+
+"1. On that site took place the confusion of tongues which divided those
+who before had been of one speech and one family, into various tribes
+and schisms at variance with each other and of various tongues. The word
+Babylon, a memorial of this event, means confusion, and is derived from
+Babel.
+
+"2. Old Babylon persecuted the people of God and destroyed the temple in
+Jerusalem.
+
+"3. It carried the people of God into captivity.
+
+"4. It was a mighty, resistless universal empire. The antitype, the
+spiritual Babylon, must correspond. There is a power that exhibits all
+these characteristics. By apostasy from the truth it originated the
+schism which has divided the family of God into different sects and
+parties which speak a different spiritual language. It has carried the
+church into a long captivity by binding upon it the thralldom of
+superstition. It has been a constant persecutor of the saints, and has
+enjoyed an almost universal dominion. That power is the woman that sits
+upon the seven-headed beast ... the false woman, symbolical of a false
+church, the great apostate spiritual dominion of Rome. And we may add,
+out of which have come--directly or indirectly--_all the religious sects
+of the present day_."
+
+Dr. Barnes says: "The word _Babylon_ became the emblem of all that was
+haughty and oppressive, and especially of all that persecuted the church
+of God. The word here (Rev. 18:4) must be used to denote some power that
+resembled the ancient and literal Babylon in these characteristics. The
+literal Babylon was no more; but the name might be used properly to
+denote a similar power."
+
+Wm. Kinkade, in Bible Doctrine, page 249, says, "I think Christ has a
+true church on earth, but its members are scattered among the various
+denominations, and are more or less under the influence of mystery
+Babylon and her daughters."
+
+Alexander Campbell says: "A reformation of Popery was attempted in
+Europe full three centuries ago. It ended in a Protestant hierarchy, and
+swarms of dissenters. Protestantism has been reformed into
+Presbyterianism, that into Congregationalism, and that into Baptistism,
+etc., etc. Methodism has attempted to reform all, but has reformed
+itself into many forms of Wesleyanism. All of them retain in their
+bosom--in their ecclesiastical organizations, worship, doctrines, and
+observances--various relics of Popery. They are at best a reformation of
+Popery, and only reformations in part. The doctrines and traditions of
+men yet impair the power and progress of the gospel in their hands." On
+Baptism, p.15.
+
+Again, he says: "The worshiping establishments now in operation
+throughout Christendom, increased and cemented by their respective
+voluminous confessions of faith, and their ecclesiastical constitutions,
+are not churches of Jesus Christ, but the legitimate daughters of that
+mother of harlots, the church of Rome." How any man could possess as
+much light on this subject as did Mr. Campbell, and then build a sect
+himself, is more than I can understand.
+
+Lorenzo Dow says of the Romish Church: "If she be the mother, who are
+the daughters? It must be the corrupt, national, established churches
+that came out of her." Dow's Life, p. 542.
+
+In the Religious Encyclopaedia, Article Antichrist, we read: "The writer
+of the book of Revelation tells us he heard a voice from heaven saying,
+'Come out of her, my people, that ye partake not of her sins, and
+receive not of her plagues.' If such persons are to be found in the
+'mother of harlots,' with much less hesitation may it be inferred that
+they are connected with her unchaste daughters, those national churches
+which are founded upon what are called Protestant principles."
+
+In the Encyclopædia of Religious Knowledge we read: "An important
+question, however, says Mr. Jones, stills remains for inquiry: Is
+Antichrist confined to the church of Rome? The answer is readily
+returned in the affirmative by Protestants in general; and happy had it
+been for the world had that been the case. But although we are fully
+warranted to consider that church as 'the mother of harlots,' the truth
+is that by whatsoever arguments we succeed in fixing that odius charge
+upon her, we shall, by parity of reasoning, be obliged to allow other
+national churches to be her unchaste daughters, and for this plain
+reason, among others, because in their very constitution and tendency
+they are hostile to the nature of the kingdom of Christ."
+
+One of Martin Luther's guests remarked that the world might continue
+fifty years, and he replied: "Pray God that it may not exist so long;
+matters would be even worse than they have been. There would rise up
+infinite sects and schisms, which are at present hidden in men's hearts
+and nature. No; may the Lord come at once, for there is no amendment to
+be expected."
+
+Mr. Hartly, a learned churchman, has remarked as follows: "There are
+many prophecies which declare the fall of the ecclesiastical powers of
+the Christian world, and though each church seems to flatter itself with
+the hope of being exempted, yet it is very plain that the prophetical
+characters belong to all. They all have left the true, pure, simple
+religion, and teach for doctrines the commandments of men."
+
+Says Mr. Simpson, in Plea for Religion: "We Protestants, too, read the
+declaration of the third angel against the worshipers of the beast and
+his image, and make ourselves easy under the awful denunciation by
+applying it exclusively to the church of Rome; never dreaming that they
+are equally applicable not only to the English, but to every church
+establishment in Christendom, which retains any of the marks of the
+beast. For though the Pope and the church of Rome is at the head of the
+grand twelve hundred and sixty years' delusion, yet all other churches,
+of whatever denomination, whether established or tolerated, which
+partake of the same spirit, or have instituted doctrines and ceremonies
+inimical to the pure and unadulterated gospel of Christ, shall sooner or
+later share in the fate of that immense fabric of human ordinances."
+
+Says Mr. Hopkins: "There is no reason to consider the antichristian
+spirit and practices confined to that which is now called the church of
+Rome. The Protestant churches have much of Antichrist in them, and are
+far from being wholly reformed from the corruptions and wickedness, in
+doctrine and practice, in it. Some churches may be more pure and may
+have proceeded farther in a reformation than others; but where can the
+church be found which is thoroughly purged from her abominations? None
+are wholly clear from an antichristian spirit and the fruits of it....
+And as the church of Rome will have a large share in the cup of
+indignation and wrath which will be poured out, so all the Christian
+world will have a distinguished portion of it: as the inhabitants of it
+are much more guilty than others. There is great reason to conclude that
+the world, particularly that part of it called Christian and Protestant,
+will yet make greater and more rapid advances in all kinds of moral
+corruption and open wickedness, till it will come to that state in which
+it will be fully ripe and prepared to be cut down by the sickle of
+divine justice and wrath."
+
+Mr. O. Scott (Wesleyan Methodist) says: "The church is as deeply
+infected with a desire for worldly gain as the world. Most of the
+denominations of the present day might be called _churches of the
+world_, with more propriety than churches of Christ. The churches have
+so far gone from primitive Christianity that they need a fresh
+regeneration--a new kind of religion."
+
+Said T. DeWitt Talmage: "I simply state a fact when I say that in many
+places the church is surrendering, and the world is conquering.... There
+is a mighty host in the Christian church, positively professing
+Christianity, who do not believe the Bible, out and out and in and
+in.... Oh! we have magnificient church machinery in this country; we
+have sixty thousand American ministers; we have costly music; we have
+great Sunday-schools; and yet I give you the appalling statistics that
+in the last twenty-five years, laying aside last year, the statistics of
+which I have not yet seen,--within the last twenty-five years the
+churches of God in this country have averaged _less than two conversions
+a year_ each! There has been an average of four or five deaths in the
+churches. How soon, at that rate, will this world be brought to God? We
+gain two; we lose four. Eternal God! what will this come to?"
+
+Bishop Roberts said: "The popular religion of this country is not the
+religion of the New Testament. It has some of its features but not all.
+It is lacking in grand fundamental elements. It answers many good
+purposes--restrains, refines, elevates, and gives to society a high
+grade of civilization; but fails to secure the great end which
+Christianity is designed to accomplish--the salvation of the soul. It
+dazzles but to blind, it promises but to deceive; it allures by worldly
+considerations to a heaven of purity, which no worldling can enter; it
+gives to its votaries, who long to eat of forbidden fruit, the assurance
+of impunity from the threatened evils, and leads them on by siren
+strains from the Paradise of purity into the broad road which ends at
+last in the blackness of the darkness of an eternal night of despair!"
+
+Says the Golden Rule: "The Protestants are outdoing the Popes in
+splendid, extravagant folly in church building. Thousands on thousands
+are expended in gay and costly ornaments to gratify pride and a wicked
+ambition, that might and should go to redeem the perishing millions!
+Does the evil, the folly, and the madness of these proud, formal,
+fashionable worshiper, stop here? These splendid monuments of Popish
+pride, upon which millions are squandered in our cities, virtually
+exclude the poor for whom Christ died, and for whom he came especially
+to preach."
+
+The report of the Michigan Yearly Conference, even as long ago as 1851,
+published in the True Wesleyan of Nov. 15, says: "The world, commercial,
+political, and ecclesiastical are alike, and are together going in the
+broad way that leads to death. Politics, commerce, and nominal religion,
+all connive at sin, reciprocally aid each other, and unite to crush the
+poor. Falsehood is unblushingly uttered in the forum and in the pulpit;
+and _sins that would shock the moral sensibilities of the heathen, go
+unrebuked in all the great denominations of our land_. These churches
+are like the Jewish church when the Savior exclaimed, 'Woe unto you,
+scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites.'"
+
+Robert Atkins, in a sermon preached in London, says: "The truly
+righteous are diminished from the earth, and no man layeth it to heart.
+The professors of religion of the present day, in every church, are
+lovers of the world, conformers to the world. Lovers of
+creature-comfort, and aspirers after respectability. They are called to
+_suffer_ with Christ, but they shrink even from reproach. Apostasy,
+_apostasy_, APOSTASY, is engraven on the very front of every church; and
+did they know it, and did they feel it, there might be hope; but alas!
+they cry 'We are rich, and increased in goods, and stand in need of
+nothing.'"
+
+I have by no means exhausted the supply of similar testimonies of
+Protestants now before me, but for lack of space I must conclude. In the
+face of these amazing facts can any one deny that Protestantism is a
+part of great Babylon and is in a fallen condition?
+
+"The merchants of the earth are waxed rich through the abundance of her
+delicacies." A certain writer on this text has said: "Who take the lead
+in all the extravagancies of the age? Church-members. Who load their
+tables with the richest and choicest viands? Church-members. Who are
+foremost in extravagance in dress, and all costly attire?
+Church-members. Who are the very personification of pride and arrogance?
+Church-members. Where shall we look for the very highest exhibition of
+the luxury, even show, and pride of life, resulting from the vanity and
+sin of the race? Answer, To a modern church-assembly on a pleasant
+Sunday." Though this writer interpreted the text literally, yet he spoke
+a vast amount of truth, as every one knows.
+
+Consider, too, the wickedness carried on everywhere in sect Babylon
+unrebuked, with the preachers ofttimes in the lead. Shows, festivals,
+frolics, grab-bag parties, cake-walk lotteries, kissing-bees, etc., etc.
+If the apostle were here to-day and we should inform him of a modern
+church entertainment where a bared female foot, projecting from beneath
+a curtain, was sold to the highest gentleman bidder, who had the
+privilege of kissing its owner and taking her to supper, he would
+probably answer, "Have I not told you, 'Babylon is fallen'?" If his
+attention was called to the fact that the members of a prominent church,
+in a novel entertainment, displayed the likeness of a donkey, minus the
+tail, while the members one by one were blindfolded, and, amid the
+uproarous laughter of the crowd assembled, were given the detached part
+to see who could place it the nearest where it belonged, he would say
+with double emphasis, "_Have I not told you_, 'BABYLON THE GREAT IS
+FALLEN, IS FALLEN, AND IS BECOME THE HABITATION OF DEVILS, AND THE HOLD
+OF EVERY FOUL SPIRIT, AND A CAGE OF EVERY UNCLEAN AND HATEFUL BIRD'?"
+The "abominations" are by no means confined to the _mother_ in the
+Revelation, but are also to be found in abundance in connection with her
+harlot daughters.
+
+ 4. And I heard another voice from heaven, saying, Come out of
+ her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that
+ ye receive not of her plagues.
+
+ 5. For her sins have reached unto heaven, and God hath
+ remembered her iniquities.
+
+ 6. Reward her even as she rewarded yon, and double unto her
+ double according to her works: in the cup which she hath filled
+ fill to her double.
+
+ 7. How much she hath glorified herself, and lived deliciously,
+ so much torment and sorrow give her: for she saith in her heart,
+ I sit a queen, and am no widow, and shall see no sorrow.
+
+ 8. Therefore shall her plagues come in one day, death, and
+ mourning, and famine; and she shall be utterly burned with fire:
+ for strong is the Lord God who judgeth her.
+
+Here we have a number of important truths brought before us--first, that
+God had a people in Babylon who up to this time were free from her
+contaminations; second, that they received a positive call from heaven
+to "come out"; third, that all who refused to obey the heavenly command
+would become partakers of her sins and receive of her plagues; fourth,
+that those who came out were to pour the strongest judgments upon
+Babylon--"reward her even as she rewarded you, and double unto her
+double according to her works: in the cup which she hath filled, fill to
+her double." It is evident that the "torment and sorrow" which God's
+people give Babylon after their departure is not a temporal
+retaliation--for they never indulge in such, and the Word of God forbids
+it--but is altogether of a spiritual nature; hence the fierce judgment
+they inflict is executing the Word of truth, which brings to light all
+the wickedness and abominations contained therein. "Death, and mourning,
+and famine" only remain. This symbolizes that all spiritual life has
+departed, while famine and mourning are left. That such is the actual
+fact is shown by the following lamentation of the late Bishop R.S.
+Foster concerning his own sect, the Methodist Episcopal:
+
+"The ball, the theatre, nude and lewd art, social luxuries, with all
+their loose moralities, are making inroads into the sacred enclosure of
+the church; and as a satisfaction for all this worldliness, Christians
+are making a great deal of Lent and Easter and Good Friday, and church
+ornamentations. It is the old trick of Satan. The Jewish church struck
+on that rock; the Romish church was wrecked on the same; and the
+Protestant church is fast reaching the same doom.
+
+"Our great dangers as we see them, are assimilation to the world,
+neglect of the poor, substitution of the form for the fact of godliness,
+abandonment of discipline, a hireling ministry, an impure gospel, which
+summed up is a fashionable church. That Methodists should be liable to
+such an outcome, and that there should be signs of it in a hundred years
+from the 'sail-loft,' seems almost the miracle of history; but who that
+looks about him to-day can fail to see the fact?
+
+"Do not Methodists, in violation of God's Word and their own discipline,
+dress as extravagantly and as fashionably as any other class? Do not the
+ladies, and even the wives and daughters of the ministry, put on 'gold
+and pearls and costly array'? Would not the plain dress insisted upon by
+John Wesley and Bishop Asbury, and worn by Hester Ann Rodgers, Lady
+Huntington, and many others equally distinguished, be now regarded in
+Methodist circles as fanaticism? Can any one going into the Methodist
+church in any of our chief cities distinguish the attire of the
+communicants from that of the theater and ball-goers? Is not worldliness
+seen in the music? Elaborately dressed and ornamented choirs, who in
+many cases make no profession of religion and are often sneering
+skeptics, go through a cold artistic or operatic performance, which is
+as much in harmony with spiritual worship as an opera or theater. Under
+such worldly performances spirituality is frozen to death.
+
+"Formerly every Methodist attended class and gave testimony of
+experimental religion. Now the class-meeting is attended by very few,
+and in many churches abandoned. Seldom the stewards, trustees and elders
+of the church attend class. Formerly nearly every Methodist prayed,
+testified or exhorted in prayer-meeting. Now but very few are heard.
+Formerly shouts and praises were heard; now such demostrations of holy
+enthusiasm and joy are regarded as fanaticism.
+
+"Worldly socials, and fairs, festivals, concerts and such like have
+taken the place of religious gatherings, revival meetings, class and
+prayer meetings of earlier days. How true that the Methodist discipline
+is a dead letter! Its rules forbid the wearing of gold or pearls or
+costly array; yet no one ever thinks of disciplining its members for
+violating them. They forbid the reading of such books and the taking of
+such diversions as do not minister to godliness, yet the church itself
+goes to frolics and festivals and fairs, which destroy the spiritual
+life of the young, as well as the old. The extent to which this is now
+carried on is appalling. The _spiritual death it carries in its train_
+will only be known when _the millions it has swept into hell_ shall
+stand before the judgment.
+
+"The early Methodist ministers went forth to sacrifice and to suffer for
+Christ. They sought not places of ease and affluence, but of privation
+and suffering. They gloried not in their big salaries, fine parsonages,
+and refined congregations, but in the souls that had been won for Jesus.
+Oh, _how changed!_ A hireling ministry will be a feeble, a timid, a
+truckling, a timeserving ministry, without faith, endurance, and holy
+power. Methodism formerly dealt in the great central truth. Now the
+pulpits deal largely in the generalities and in popular lectures. The
+glorious doctrine of entire sanctification is rarely heard and seldom
+witnessed in the pulpits."
+
+This lengthy quotation shows clearly the spiritual condition of
+Methodism, and certainly she is no worse than the rest. God is calling
+his people out of "all the places where they have been scattered in the
+cloudy and dark day." Ezek. 34:12. Those who refuse to walk in the light
+will go into darkness. God help people to "flee out of the midst of
+Babylon, and deliver every man his soul."
+
+ 9. And the kings of the earth, who have committed fornication
+ and lived deliciously with her, shall bewail her, and lament for
+ her, when they shall see the smoke of her burning,
+
+ 10. Standing afar off for the fear of her torment, saying, Alas,
+ alas that great city Babylon, that mighty city! for in one hour
+ is thy judgment come.
+
+ 11. And the merchants of the earth shall weep and mourn over
+ her; for no man buyeth their merchandise any more:
+
+ 12. The merchandise of gold, and silver, and precious stones,
+ and of pearls, and fine linen, and purple, and silk, and
+ scarlet, and all thyine wood, and all manner vessels of ivory,
+ and all manner vessels of most precious wood, and of brass, and
+ iron, and marble,
+
+ 13. And cinnamon, and odors, and ointments, and frankincense,
+ and wine, and oil, and fine flour, and wheat, and beasts, and
+ sheep, and horses, and chariots, and slaves, and souls of men.
+
+ 14. And the fruits that thy soul lusted after are departed from
+ thee, and all things which were dainty and goodly are departed
+ from thee, and thou shalt find them no more at all.
+
+ 15. The merchants of these things, which were made rich by her,
+ shall stand afar off for the fear of her torment, weeping and
+ wailing,
+
+ 16. And saying, Alas, alas that great city, that was clothed in
+ fine linen, and purple, and scarlet, and decked with gold, and
+ precious stones, and pearls!
+
+ 17. For in one hour so great riches is come to nought. And every
+ shipmaster, and all the company in ships, and sailors, and as
+ many as trade by sea, stood afar off,
+
+ 18. And cried when they saw the smoke of her burning, saying,
+ What city is like unto this great city!
+
+ 19. And they cast dust on their heads, and cried, weeping and
+ wailing, saying, Alas, alas that great city, wherein were made
+ rich all that had ships in the sea by reason of her costliness!
+ for in one hour is she made desolate.
+
+In this description we have a continuation of the judgments of Babylon
+already introduced. It must be borne in mind, however, that this is the
+spiritual judgments following her moral fall, and not her final and
+everlasting literal destruction. The latter is described under another
+symbol a little further on in this series of prophecy.
+
+The symbol here is that of a great city, the grand metropolis of the
+world, the mart of earth's commerce; a superb city, their [_sic_] being
+no end to its luxuries and magnificence. In it everything that can
+minister to the appetite, gratify the taste, and feed the pride of the
+human soul is to be found in profusion, being described at length. This
+great city is suddenly afire, and her merchants and the great men of the
+world who sustain her are overwhelmed with sorrow at the sight of all
+their wealth disappearing. Thus is great sect Babylon represented. She
+is a mighty city extending not only over the Apocalyptic earth, but, as
+symbolized by the ship-masters, sailors, and foreign traders, over the
+whole world. Suddenly she is set on fire by heaven's truth and her
+spiritual magnificence destroyed. The apostle Paul describes the great
+apostasy as a system that the "Lord shall _consume_ with the spirit of
+his mouth, and shall _destroy_ with the brightness of his coming." 2
+Thes. 2:8. That spiritual consumption is now taking place in accordance
+with the symbols of this chapter, but the entire literal destruction of
+old Babylon will take place coincident "with the brightness of his
+coming," as described in the following chapter.
+
+That sectarians are greatly alarmed over the sad condition of their
+fallen churches is clearly shown by the many quotations already given
+from Protestant writers. They may not be aware that it is a judgment
+from heaven upon man-made organizations; but such we know it to be in
+the light of eternal truth. Not only are they bewailing the loss of
+spiritual life and the desolating famine in sectdom, as was Bishop
+Foster and others, but they are beginning to tremble for their own
+safety and to wonder what the final outcome of it all will be. Wherever
+the gospel truth has been preached in all its purity, the sectarian
+denominations have been left destitute of spiritual life; for the
+children of God have heard his call, "Come out of her, my people," and
+have made their escape to Zion. Hence the ministers of Babylon cry out
+continually, "Stop! you are tearing our churches down," "You are taking
+our best members away from us," etc. But we can not withhold the truth;
+for the time has come when God is gathering his people together out of
+all the "places where they have been scattered in the cloudy and dark
+day" (Ezek. 34:12) into the one church that Jesus built. "Babylon is
+fallen, is fallen."
+
+ 20. Rejoice over her, thou heaven, and ye holy apostles and
+ prophets; for God hath avenged you on her.
+
+This verse is so clear that it requires no special explanation. God's
+people are delivered from sect Babylon; and while the judgments of
+eternal truth are being poured out upon her, all heaven and earth is
+called upon to rejoice and to give glory to God.
+
+ "We stand in the glory that Jesus has given,
+ The moon as the day-spring doth shine;
+ The light of the sun is now equal to seven,
+ So bright is the glory divine.
+
+ "Now filled with the Spirit and clad in the armor
+ Of light and omnipotent truth,
+ We'll testify ever and Jesus we'll honor,
+ And stand from sin Babel aloof.
+
+ "The prophet's keen vision transpiercing the ages,
+ Beheld us to Zion return;
+ We'll sing of our freedom, though Babylon rages,
+ We'll shout as her city doth burn."
+
+ 21. And a mighty angel took up a stone like a great millstone,
+ and cast it into the sea, saying, Thus with violence shall that
+ great city Babylon be thrown down, and shall be found no more at
+ all.
+
+ 22. And the voice of harpers, and musicians, and of pipers, and
+ trumpeters, shall be heard no more at all in thee; and no
+ craftsman, of whatsoever craft he be, shall be found any more in
+ thee; and the sound of a millstone shall be heard no more at all
+ in thee;
+
+ 23. And the light of a candle shall shine no more at all in
+ thee; and the voice of the bridegroom and of the bride shall be
+ heard no more at all in thee: for thy merchants were the great
+ men of the earth; for by thy sorceries were all nations
+ deceived.
+
+ 24. And in her was found the blood of prophets, and of saints,
+ and of all that were slain upon the earth.
+
+Following the moral fall of Babylon and the call of God's people out of
+her, a mighty angel predicts her eternal doom. "With violence shall that
+great city Babylon be thrown down, and _shall be found no more at all_."
+This doubtless has reference to the entire city of Babylon in all her
+divisions brought to view in this series of prophecy and shows her final
+destruction at the coming of Christ, when she shall suddenly be thrown
+with terrific force, like a great millstone descending into the sea, and
+"shall be found no more at all." According to the symbols here given she
+will be like a city completely destroyed, not one inhabitant or living
+creature remaining. Thus her eternal doom is pictured and remains to be
+yet fulfilled.
+
+"And in her was found the blood of prophets, and of saints, and of all
+that were slain upon the earth." We have already shown that
+Protestantism, as well as her mother Romanism, has been guilty of
+shedding innocent blood; and as the term Babylon includes both these
+divisions, when the great city is thrown down with violence, Romanism
+and Protestantism will sink together, and then this awful treasure--the
+blood of prophets and of saints--shall be brought to light in that last
+great day of God Almighty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+
+ And after these things I heard a great voice of much people in
+ heaven, saying, Alleluia; Salvation, and glory, and honor, and
+ power, unto the Lord our God:
+
+ 2. For true and righteous are his judgments: for he hath judged
+ the great whore, which did corrupt the earth with her
+ fornication, and hath avenged the blood of his servants at her
+ hand.
+
+ 3. And again they said, Alleluia. And her smoke rose up for ever
+ and ever.
+
+ 4. And the four and twenty elders and the four beasts fell down
+ and worshipped God that sat on the throne, saying, Amen;
+ Alleluia.
+
+ 5. And a voice came out of the throne, saying, Praise our God,
+ all ye his servants, and ye that fear him, both small and great.
+
+ 6. And I heard as it were the voice of a great multitude, and as
+ the voice of many waters, and as the voice of mighty
+ thunderings, saying, Alleluia: for the Lord God omnipotent
+ reigneth.
+
+ 7. Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honor to him: for the
+ marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife hath made herself
+ ready.
+
+ 8. And to her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine
+ linen, clean and white: for the fine linen is the righteousness
+ of saints.
+
+ 9. And he saith unto me, Write, Blessed are they which are
+ called unto the marriage supper of the Lamb. And he saith unto
+ me, These are the true sayings of God.
+
+ 10. And I fell at his feet to worship him. And he said unto me,
+ See thou do it not: I am thy fellowservant, and of thy brethren
+ that have the testimony of Jesus: worship God: for the testimony
+ of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy.
+
+The scene of this vision is laid in heaven. John heard a great voice of
+much people saying, "Alleluia; Salvation, and glory, and honor, and
+power, unto the Lord our God." This great song of praise doubtless came
+from the lips of the angelic throng; for immediately the four living
+creatures and the four and twenty elders reechoed the same shout of
+praise, saying, "Amen; Alleluia." Then came a voice from the throne
+calling upon the servants of God, both small and great, to unite on this
+occasion in one grand and sacred song of praise; and this sublime chorus
+fell upon the ear of the enraptured apostle "as it were the voice of a
+great multitude, and as the voice of many waters, and as the voice of
+mighty thunderings, saying, Alleluia: for the Lord God omnipotent
+reigneth. Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honor to him for the
+marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife [or bride] hath made herself
+ready." Was not here a hearty response to that call, "Rejoice over her
+thou heaven"? While this scene shows the interest all heaven takes in
+these wondrous scenes of earth, it is doubtless intended especially to
+represent the joy and thanksgiving of God's people who have "gotten the
+victory over the beast, and over his image, and over his mark, and over
+the number of his name."
+
+The marriage of the Lamb which was about to take place was a special
+theme of joy on this occasion. In the Scripture the term _marriage_ is
+frequently used to represent a special union between Christ and his
+people. Thus, the early church was represented as being free because of
+the death of the law, that they "should be _married_ to another, even to
+him who is raised from the dead." Rom. 7:4. So, also, the eternal union
+of Christ with his people is here described under the figure of
+marriage. In one sense they have been married to Christ all through this
+dispensation; in another sense they have not. The church has had the
+promise of this eternal union, hence she has been betrothed to Christ;
+but left in the world, she has been driven into the wilderness, while a
+corrupt and drunken prostitute and her harlot daughters have been in the
+public view. Now, however, the judgments of God have descended upon
+Babylon, and the bride of Christ appears in all her beauty again,
+"arrayed in fine linen, clean and white"; and the next great event is
+her public marriage to Christ when he comes to claim her as his own.
+
+The marriage scene is one of the most joyful that we witness on earth,
+and among Eastern nations especially was celebrated with great pomp and
+magnificence, the joy and splendor of the occasion being enhanced
+according to the rank and wealth of the parties. But earth has never
+witnessed such an event as this special _marriage of the Lamb_. Well may
+the inhabitants of heaven and earth, in view of this sublime spectacle,
+swell the song of praise--"Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honor to
+him: for the marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife hath made
+herself ready." The special preparations that the bride is making
+represents the glorious holiness reformation that is now sweeping over
+the world, gathering God's people together for the splendid event.
+"Blessed are they which are called unto the marriage supper of the
+Lamb."
+
+"These are the true sayings of God." They are almost too glorious to be
+believed; still, they are no idle dreams of fancy: they are true, yea
+"the true sayings of God." In the contemplation of such a wonderful
+event, the beloved apostle was carried away, as it were, with holy
+enthusiasm, and he fell at the feet of the angel to worship. We do not
+know just what the motives or impressions were that caused him to do
+this. But his soul was full, full to overflowing, and he could not but
+adore and worship. The angel, however, refused the homage thus offered,
+by the declaration that he himself, also, was the servant of Christ and
+one of the brethren that had the testimony of Jesus; "for the testimony
+of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy." The idea is: "I am a fellowservant
+with you, and we both have his testimony. You bear witness to him now in
+this present generation; I bear witness to those who are to come. You
+witness now of his death and resurrection; I tell of his future glory
+and triumphs. We are both, therefore, engaged in the same good work. The
+testimony of Jesus and the spirit of prophecy are the same. To God,
+therefore, we must both bow." See remarks on chap. 1:1.
+
+ 11. And I saw heaven opened, and behold a white horse; and he
+ that sat upon him was called Faithful and True, and in
+ righteousness he doth judge and make war.
+
+ 12. His eyes were as a flame _of_ fire, and on his head were
+ many crowns; and he had a name written, that no man knew, but he
+ himself.
+
+ 13. And he was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood: and his
+ name is called The Word of God.
+
+ 14. And the armies which were in heaven followed him upon white
+ horses, clothed in fine linen, white and clean.
+
+ 15. And out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword, that with it he
+ should smite the nations: and he shall rule them with a rod of
+ iron: and he treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath
+ of Almighty God.
+
+ 16. And he hath on his vesture and on his thigh a name written,
+ KING OF KINGS, AND LORD OF LORDS.
+
+That the person described in this vision is Christ is questioned by no
+one. He is the same one who appeared to John in the beginning. Then he
+stood in the midst of the seven golden candle-sticks, the sure defense
+of the churches, holding the seven stars in his right hand. Now,
+however, he appears from the opened heavens on a white horse, his
+mission "to judge and make war." The description of his person, his
+names, and his attributes, unmistakably proclaim him the Son of God. He
+is the "faithful and true," the name by which he made himself known to
+the churches of Philadelphia and Laodicea. "His eyes as a flame of fire"
+denotes omniscience; and as a searcher of all hearts he made himself
+known to the church of Thyatira. "Many crowns" are a symbol of supreme
+sovereignty and doubtless signify his many victories. "And he had a name
+written which no man knew but he himself." He had names by which he
+might be known to mortals; but he had one name that no created
+intelligence could understand: it was known only to him. What that name
+was, of course, is not given; it could not be. If the human mind could
+not conceive it, human language could not convey it. We can know him as
+the Faithful and true Witness, as the Word of God, and as King of kings
+and Lord of lords; but there is one name that we can not know. His
+"vesture dipped in blood" refers, not to the blood of atonement, but to
+the blood of his enemies sprinkled upon his raiment in treading the
+winepress of God's wrath, and denotes that he was going forth to the
+dread work of vengeance. To this I shall refer more fully hereafter. His
+name is also called "the Word of God," which, when used as a personal
+appellation in the Scriptures, always signifies Jesus Christ.
+
+Before considering his mission further and the armies that accompanied
+him, I wish to call special attention to the nature and the chronology
+of this event. If the present series of prophetic symbols (which begin
+with chap. 17) is a narrative of continuous events reaching to the end,
+then the vision before us is a description of the second coming of
+Christ, the event which was just previously announced and for which the
+bride had made herself ready. The usual interpretation given it is, that
+it is a sublime description of the servants of Christ going forth under
+his direction to spread the truth everywhere among the nations--in
+short, that it is the triumph of gospel truth over error under the
+_providential_ government of Christ. That such a meaning can be derived
+from the vision by taking it in a _figurative_ sense there can be no
+doubt, and this is what commentators generally do. They make the whole a
+figurative description of the triumph of the gospel, Christ being
+present only by his superintending providence. It is made simply a
+highly poetic description of the victory of truth and righteousness. In
+this case, however, the principles of symbolic language are clearly
+abandoned and a mere ordinary figurative meaning given. If we follow
+strictly the laws of symbolic language, as we manifestly ought, we shall
+be compelled to take another view of it.
+
+In the first place, if this does not describe the actual coming of
+Christ, then his second coming is nowhere described in the Revelation.
+That so great an event should merely be alluded to in a few places and
+nowhere symbolically described seems incredible. At the judgment scene
+brought to view in the following chapter the presence of Christ is
+_assumed_, but it is not stated. Again, there are no victories of love
+and mercy described at all in the vision before us; but, on the
+contrary, it is a scene of fearful judgment--a terrible treading of "the
+winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God," the complete
+overthrow of every opposing power; while the beast and the false prophet
+are represented as taken and cast alive into a lake of fire burning with
+brimstone. Surely, this is not the work of the church of God. But let it
+be remembered especially that this last event takes place under the
+_seventh_ plague, which is the "filling up" of the wrath of God, and
+that Christ previously announced under the sixth vial, "Behold, _I come_
+as a thief." Christ comes in reality when this seventh plague occurs. To
+represent the glorious triumphs of Christianity by the mission of the
+church, the gospel and the Holy Spirit, under the symbol of Christ,
+going forth to judge, to make war, and to tread the winepress of God's
+wrath, is at war with every principle of symbolic language.
+
+But can this vision of Christ upon a white horse denote a mere
+providential superintendence, such as Christ constantly exercises over
+the church and its spiritual affairs on earth? Certainly not by any
+principle of symbolic language. Throughout the whole prophecy thus far
+we have seen that whenever any symbolic agent is brought upon the
+panorama, whether horseman, or beasts, or locusts, or harlot, or
+whatever else, it always denotes some corresponding agents appearing on
+earth and beginning their appropriate work. The symbolic agent is real.
+But here is a symbolic appearance of Christ. By what law could such a
+symbolic appearance represent merely a providential superintendence? And
+if his appearance was necessary in this case, why was it not necessary
+in every event, to show that it was done under his direction? Again, if
+this symbolic appearance of Christ is not his real appearance, how can
+we tell that there is any reality in the appearance of the horsemen of
+the first four seals, the ten-horned beast, or the harlot woman? What
+right have we to remove one agent from the panorama as an actual agent
+there any more than another? And if this is not his real appearance,
+upon what principle of interpretation can we ever establish the fact of
+his second coming? It is evident to all that, if we can turn this agent
+into a mere providential one, we can do the same with another, and thus
+set aside his second coming altogether. Then, what shall we say in the
+next chapter when some one steals our weapons and declares that the
+great white throne before which all the dead, small and great, stand is
+nothing but that providential government of God under which all sinners
+pass condemnation upon themselves and their sins find them out? If we
+can deal thus with symbols, we can do anything with them and can make
+out any meaning we please.
+
+The laws of symbolic language require us to take the appearance of
+Christ in this vision just as we do the appearance of any other agent,
+as a real event. We can not consistently give it any other meaning. His
+_symbolic_ appearance must represent his _real_ appearance; otherwise,
+it can never be represented by anything. Jesus appears in his own name
+and person because there is no other that can represent his infinite
+dignity and majesty. And the symbols connected with him denote the
+object of his mission and the work which he performs. His white horse
+shows him now a glorious conqueror; his crowns denote his supreme
+dominion; the sword of his mouth and his vesture dipped in blood denote
+the dread work of vengeance upon his enemies; while the army following
+him doubtless denotes the "ten thousands of his saints" that accompany
+him when he comes. Jude 14. The bride has already prepared herself for
+his coming, and now the eternal union takes place. "Blessed are they
+which are called unto the marriage supper of the Lamb."
+
+ 17. And I saw an angel standing in the sun; and he cried with a
+ loud voice, saying to all the fowls that fly in the midst of
+ heaven, Come and gather yourselves together unto the supper of
+ the great God;
+
+ 18. That ye may eat the flesh of kings, and the flesh of
+ captains, and the flesh of mighty men, and the flesh of horses;
+ and of them that sit on them, and the flesh of all men, both
+ free and bond, both small and great.
+
+ 19. And I saw the beast, and the kings of the earth, and their
+ armies, gathered together to make war against him that sat on
+ the horse, and against his army.
+
+ 20. And the beast was taken, and with him the false prophet that
+ wrought miracles before him, with which he deceived them that
+ had received the mark of the beast, and them that worshipped his
+ image. These both were cast alive into a lake of fire burning
+ with brimstone.
+
+ 21. And the remnant were slain with the sword of him that sat
+ upon the horse, which sword proceeded out of his mouth: and all
+ the fowls were filled with their flesh.
+
+The foregoing explanation so nearly covers this ground that little
+remains to be said. The symbol is that of vast slaughter on a
+battle-field, which gathers all the birds of heaven and the beasts of
+the forest to the prey. The enemies gathered for this battle were "the
+beast, and the kings of the earth, and their armies," together with the
+false prophet. This is the grand confederacy of wickedness formed under
+the mission of the three unclean spirits that went forth, not only unto
+the kings of the earth, but also into the whole world. This is not a
+literal collecting of armies, hence not a literal slaughter upon a
+battlefield, nor a literal assembling of carrion birds; but it is a
+symbolic representation of the final and eternal destruction of the
+allied powers of sin. As will be further described in the following
+chapter, they were gathered together for the purpose of overthrowing the
+church of God and anticipated a complete victory in the battle of
+Armageddon; but the sudden appearance of Jesus Christ to rescue his
+bride results in their complete overthrow. The special theme of this
+series of prophecy has been the history of apostate Christendom; hence
+the beast and the false prophet are represented as being taken and
+thrown into the lake of fire burning with brimstone. "The remnant" that
+were slain refers to the other powers of wickedness not embraced in
+Catholicism and Protestantism This series being now traced to its close,
+the narrative returns to take up another important theme of prophetic
+truth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+
+ And I saw an angel come down from heaven, having the key of the
+ bottomless pit and a great chain in his hand.
+
+ 2. And he laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is
+ the Devil, and Satan, and bound him a thousand years.
+
+ 3. And cast him into the bottomless pit, and shut him up, and
+ set a seal upon him, that he should deceive the nations no more,
+ till the thousand years should be fulfilled: and after that he
+ must be loosed a little season.
+
+It is commonly supposed that the events here described are to occur at
+the second advent; but by considering carefully the different things
+enumerated in this chapter--the binding of the dragon; then a thousand
+years; after that the Armageddon battle; and last of all the judgment
+scene, in which all the dead, both small and great, are rewarded, and
+all the powers of wickedness cast into the lake of fire--it will be seen
+at once that this is not a continuation of the series of prophecy
+immediately preceding, but an entirely new theme, running partly
+parallel with that series, and both ending at the same point--the second
+coming of Christ and the general judgment, in which the lake of fire is
+the final doom of the combined powers of wickedness. In that series the
+beast and the false prophet--Romanism and Protestantism--were the chief
+powers of evil under consideration; in this series the dragon feature
+predominates. If this be not true, then there will be two judgment
+scenes and the wicked cast into the lake of fire twice. Positive proof
+of the position here taken will be given as we proceed.
+
+The power here referred to as "the Devil and Satan" is also denominated
+"the dragon." This use of the definite article shows clearly that a
+particular character is designated--_the_ dragon--and implies that the
+object has already been introduced. In his first appearance upon the
+symbolic panorama (chap. 12:3) he is simply styled _a_ dragon, but in
+every subsequent instance he is called _the_ dragon, which proves that
+the same character is meant. In addition to the former remarks on
+chapter 12:9 relative to the terms applied to this antichristian power,
+the following quotation from the People's Cyclopædia will throw some
+light on the subject: "In the mythical history and legendary poetry of
+almost every nation, the dragon appears as the emblem of the destructive
+and anarchistic principle.... Like the serpent, the dragon is always a
+minister of evil ... the object of which is to fight order, harmony, and
+progress. In Christian art, the dragon is the emblem of sin.... It is
+often represented as crushed under the feet of saints and martyrs....
+Sometimes its prostrate attitude signifies the triumph of Christianity
+over Paganism." Art. Dragon. Considering this usage of these terms for
+ages, it is not strange that they were applied also to that great
+antichristian, persecuting system of Paganism, which stood before
+Christianity as its greatest barrier to "order, harmony, and progress."
+
+The angel that overthrew this public system of Pagan infidelity
+symbolizes the primitive host of Christians, the ministers in
+particular. Some have supposed that he represented Christ; but, as
+already shown conclusively, Christ can not be symbolized by an inferior
+intelligence, hence always appears upon the scene in his own character,
+proclaiming his own eternal name. The fact that this angel possessed the
+key of the bottomless pit is no proof that he is Christ, even though in
+chapter 1:18 Jesus is said to have certain keys; for in chapter 9:1 we
+find that a _fallen star_--the symbol of Mohammed--is said to have "the
+key of the bottomless pit" also. At the most, this expression is only a
+symbol of power and authority, be it good or bad. In the gospel the same
+figure is applied to God's ministers, where they are given authority to
+bind the powers of wickedness on earth. Mat. 16:19; 18:18. The chain is
+a symbol of the power to bind.
+
+When Christianity first commenced its warfare with this huge system of
+error, almost the entire then-known world was under its deceptive
+influence; but by a long conflict, in which thousands of the noble
+followers of the Lamb were slaughtered, this antichristian public system
+of Pagan infidelity was at last completely overthrown, and the final
+result was, that the civilized world became as completely Christian
+(nominally at least) as it ever had been Pagan. This great
+transformation could never have been effected without the undying
+heroism and whole-hearted consecration of the first disciples of Christ.
+From this time the dragon _as such_--as a public deceiver of the nations
+throughout the Apocalyptic earth--was overthrown. This marks the
+beginning of the thousand years mentioned.
+
+Since many of the principles of heathenism were copied by the church of
+Rome, it may be difficult for some to understand at first why it is said
+that the dragon no longer deceived the nations after being cast down by
+primitive Christianity; but this becomes clear when we consider what the
+dragon really was and what the church of Rome was understood to be. A
+time came when the entire civilized world knew that heathenism as such
+was wrong and rejected the very idea of a plurality of gods; but they
+were led to believe that they could adapt many of their former rites and
+ceremonies to the worship of the one true God in whom they believed and
+thereby render acceptable service to him, and were sure that the Romish
+church was the one true apostolic church. It was not the dragon, or
+heathenism, that then deceived them; it was Christianity--_a false
+Christianity_. The manner in which the people were deceived during the
+time following the casting down of heathenism in the beginning has
+already been considered in chapters XII, XIII, XVII, XVIII, etc.,
+covering the same period of time included in the one thousand years in
+the vision before us.
+
+We can not apply this period specified as literally one thousand years
+without varying from every principle of time prophecy in the Revelation,
+for they are all symbolic; neither can we apply it according to the
+usual year-day method, which, signifying three hundred and sixty
+thousand years, would throw this series of events out of harmony with
+the time-periods allotted to the other themes of truth running over the
+same ground and terminating at the same point--the general judgment.
+Therefore, to be consistent, we shall have to apply it as (so far as
+human knowledge of the exact dates is concerned) an indefinite length of
+time, on the same principle that "the hour of temptation" in chapter
+3:10, the three and one-half days in chapter 11:9, and the "hour" in
+which the ten kingdoms receive power with the beast (chap. 17:12), etc.,
+are applied.
+
+ 4. And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them, and judgment was
+ given unto them: and I saw the souls of them that were beheaded
+ for the witness of Jesus, and for the word of God, and which had
+ not worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither had
+ received his mark upon their foreheads, or in their hands; and
+ they lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years.
+
+ 5. But the rest of the dead lived not again until the thousand
+ years were finished. This is the first resurrection.
+
+ 6. Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first
+ resurrection: on such the second death hath no power, but they
+ shall be priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with him
+ a thousand years.
+
+We have in this description another division of the subject
+introduced--a history of God's people, or one phase of the church,
+during the same thousand years following the casting down of the dragon.
+"They lived and reigned with Christ." It was those who had "part in the
+first resurrection" that were exalted to this honored position with
+Christ. Millenarians always _assume_ that this refers to a literal
+resurrection at the second coming of Christ, but no such thing is hinted
+at. Not one word is said about literally resurrected saints reigning.
+John says, "I saw the _souls_ of them which were beheaded for the
+witness of Jesus ... and _they_ lived and reigned with Christ a thousand
+years." Nothing whatever is said about any reign on earth at all; but
+the description shows plainly that it was disembodied spirits that were
+reigning with Christ in Paradise during the period that followed the
+casting down of the dragon, which was in reality one of long apostasy
+and darkness on earth. Before and during this conflict with Paganism the
+church of God was publicly triumphant on earth. Afterward, during the
+apostasy, a false church was, in the public view, triumphant, while the
+church of God was crowded out of sight into the wilderness. However, the
+reign of God's saints did not cease; for when they were slaughtered by
+their relentless persecutors and deprived of their reign on earth, they
+were, as symbolized by the man-child, caught up to God and to his throne
+and there "lived and reigned with Christ" during the thousand years
+under consideration.
+
+This same thought concerning the reign of the martyrs in Paradise while
+the powers of evil triumphed on earth, was brought to view on the
+opening of the fifth seal in chapter 6:9-11. "And when he had opened the
+fifth seal, I saw under the altar the _souls of them that were slain_
+for the word of God, and for the testimony which they held: and they
+cried with a loud voice, saying, How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost
+thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth? And
+white robes were given unto every one of them; and it was said unto
+them, that they should rest yet for a little season, until their
+fellowservants also and their brethren, _that should be killed as they
+were_ should be fulfilled." This quotation will make clear one point
+concerning the refusal of the martyrs to worship the beast and his
+image. We are not to understand that every soul of the martyrs John saw
+in these visions reigned during the entire period under consideration;
+but he beheld the reign of the saints above during the one thousand
+years, and he saw there the souls of all the martyrs--such as had been
+slain in the early days of Christianity (chap. 12:11); such as refused
+to worship the beast and were martyred therefor (chap. 13:7); and also,
+such as "should be killed as they were" (chap. 6:11) and were put to
+death shortly after the formation of the image of the beast. Chap.
+13:15; 16:6.
+
+This company of souls that the apostle saw reigning with Christ above
+were those who had had part "in the first resurrection," which had made
+them "blessed and holy." They were not on earth; they were disembodied
+spirits above, hence had not been literally resurrected. The Scriptures
+clearly teach that mankind in their ordinary condition are "_dead_ in
+trespasses and in sins," and that through salvation, which makes them
+"blessed and holy," they are "quickened" to a new life in Christ. Eph.
+2:1. That this is Scripturally "the first resurrection" is proved most
+positively by the words of Christ--"Verily, verily, I say unto you, the
+hour is coming, _and now is_, when the _dead_ shall hear the voice of
+the Son of God: and they that hear _shall live_. He that heareth my
+word, and believeth on him that sent me, _hath_ everlasting life, and
+shall not come into condemnation, but is _passed from death unto life_."
+John 5:25, 24. Although many other proofs could easily be given, this of
+itself is sufficient to establish the point that the host of early
+Christians who had "passed from death unto life" in Christ and who gave
+their lives gladly for the sake of Christ, constituted the ones referred
+to as having had "part in the first resurrection." According to verse 6
+it was only on those who had part in the first resurrection that the
+second death had no power. The church at Smyrna received the sure
+promise from Christ himself that they should "not be hurt of the second
+death" (chap. 2:11); and this shows beyond all question that even at
+that early date they had had part in this first resurrection that makes
+men blessed and holy.
+
+It is the trick of Beelzebub to deceive souls by causing them to
+overlook the fact that this first resurrection that made men blessed and
+holy is of a spiritual nature and to fix their hopes in two literal
+resurrections at the end. There will be but one literal resurrection
+then, as is clearly shown by the account given of the judgment in this
+chapter, verses 11-15. The writer of the Revelation declared positively,
+"Behold, he cometh with clouds: and _every eye_ shall see him, and they
+also which pierced him: and all kindreds of the earth shall wail because
+of him." Chap. 1:7. If this does not prove that there is but one literal
+resurrection when Christ comes, then I would not know how to state such
+a fact if I desired. Furthermore, Jesus himself, in the same chapter in
+which he described "the first resurrection," says most positively that
+all the literal dead shall be resurrected at the same time. "Marvel not
+at this," he says: "the _hour_ is coming, in the which all that are in
+the graves shall hear his voice, and shall come forth; they that have
+done good, unto the resurrection of life; and they that have done evil,
+unto the resurrection of damnation." John 5:28, 29. This _hour_
+certainly can not signify more than a short period of time. In their
+efforts to prove two literal resurrections, millenarians always quote
+with emphasis, "The dead in Christ shall rise first." 1 Thes. 4:16. In
+doing so they, either ignorantly or wilfully, wrest the Scriptures to
+their own destruction; for any one can see at a glance that no such
+thing as two resurrections is even hinted at. Verses 15-17 simply teach
+this, that the righteous who are living on the earth at the time Christ
+appears will not ascend to heaven _before_ the righteous dead are
+resurrected, but the dead will rise first, then they will all be caught
+up together at one and the same time. The wicked are not mentioned in
+this connection; for, as stated, Paul was writing this only for the
+comfort and the edification of the church. In the following chapter,
+however, their "sudden destruction" at the second coming of Christ is
+mentioned as a warning to the church.
+
+It is evident that the first resurrection as applied in this connection
+specified particularly that phase of the church which, as symbolized by
+the man-child, was caught up to God through martyrdom and there "lived
+and reigned with Christ." The other phase of the church, symbolized by
+the woman, is not said to reign with Christ a thousand years, but, on
+the other hand, is represented as driven into the wilderness, her public
+reign on earth being ended by the holy city being trodden under foot of
+a profane multitude of apostate beast-worshipers; and the two witnesses,
+clothed in sackcloth, were prophesying only in a few isolated,
+individual hearts.
+
+A careful study of this scripture, taken in connection with others in
+the Revelation applying to the same object, will show that all God's
+people, both those here brought to view during the thousand years and
+those following that period, are spoken of as dead people resurrected
+and reigning. They are considered under two phases--those who, as
+symbolized by the man-child, were caught up to God through martyrdom and
+there lived and reigned with Christ; and those who, as symbolized by the
+woman, were deprived of their public reign on earth and were driven into
+the wilderness during the same period. The first phase were "priests of
+God and of Christ" and reigned with him in Paradise (chap. 6:9-11); but
+"the rest," the phase symbolized by the woman, did not live and enjoy
+their public reign again, as in the early days of Christianity, until
+the expiration of the thousand-year period. It is true that individuals
+on earth received life from God and were thus spiritually resurrected
+during the thousand-year period; but the dominant beast-power martyred
+them by thousands, the two witnesses were then in their sack-cloth
+state, and thus the public triumphal reign of the saints on earth
+ceased. The statement of verse five that "the rest of the dead lived not
+again until the thousand years were finished" should be applied not in
+an individual, but in a general sense, the same as the reign above
+during the same period is considered. There is also some doubt as to the
+authenticity of this sentence. It is not found in the Vatican
+Manuscript, which is one of the oldest in existence; and the Syriac
+Version, which has come down to us from early days through an entirely
+separate channel, does not contain it. However, it is evident that the
+phase of the church symbolized by the woman actually reigns triumphantly
+on earth after the thousand years is finished; for verses 7-9 of this
+chapter show that the dragon, combined with Gog and Magog, goes forth on
+the breadth of the earth to compass the camp of the saints just before
+the end of time.
+
+The fact that the reign of God's people on earth is divided into two
+distinct periods is shown also by other prophecies. In the seventh
+chapter of Daniel is recorded a vision of four great beasts, symbolizing
+the Babylonian, Medo-Persian, Grecian, and Roman empires. Verse 18,
+connected with Dan. 2:31-44, shows that the saints were to possess the
+kingdom of God before the overthrow of all these four kingdoms, which
+was actually fulfilled by Jesus Christ appearing during the reign of the
+Roman empire and planting the kingdom of God in the earth. See Mark
+1:15; Luke 12:32; 16:16; Col. 1:13. Then follows a description of the
+rise of the Papacy, which was to "_wear out the saints of the most
+High_" for a time, times, and the dividing of times--three and one-half
+times, or forty-two months, or, prophetically, twelve hundred and sixty
+years. This, as before explained, reaches to the year A.D. 1530. During
+this period the public reign of the saints on earth ceased. Then
+immediately following it is said, "The judgment shall sit, and they
+shall take away his dominion, to consume and to destroy it _unto the
+end_." This does not refer to the final judgment; it is a spiritual
+judgment that commences before that time and continues "_unto the end_."
+For example of a similar _judgment_ see Acts 7:7.
+
+God had a people during the Protestant era who walked in all the light
+they possessed and who were filled with judgment against the beast-power
+that had worn out the saints for ages. And though in places some were
+put to death for refusing to worship the image of the beast that
+lifeless professors had set up, yet there were from time to time
+reformations that resurrected many people to life in Christ. A little
+later, however, the real spiritual reign of the saints is perfectly
+restored in the pure gospel light of the evening time, and now the next
+verse is fulfilled, which says, "And the kingdom and dominion, and the
+greatness of the kingdom under the whole heaven, shall be given to the
+people of the saints of the most High, whose kingdom is an everlasting
+kingdom." It is only reasonable to suppose that the public reign on
+earth would commence gradually and would finally reach its perfect
+fulfilment, just the same as it ceased gradually in the beginning.
+Therefore we can not point to a definite date exactly marking the end of
+the thousand years, any more than we can locate exactly the time of its
+commencement; but we must be satisfied just to consider this symbolic
+expression as covering a long period of time during which these
+important phases of deep truth are considered merely from a general
+standpoint.
+
+This special reign of a thousand years above is doubtless brought to our
+view for the express purpose of making the history of the triumph of
+Christianity continuous. When interrupted on earth, the scene is
+suddenly transferred to Paradise; then when the woman comes out of the
+wilderness and the public reign on earth begins again, while the woman
+is being prepared as a bride for the coming of the Lamb, the scene, as
+the following description in verse 9 also will show, is again
+transferred to earth. The reign above does not in reality cease with the
+expiration of the thousand years, but we are permitted to obtain a view
+of it only for that length of time during the down-trodden state of the
+church on earth. This reign of the martyrs' above is placed in direct
+contrast with the public reign on earth during the same time, which
+consisted of multitudes of people worshiping the beast, recieving his
+image and his mark. What the "thrones" on which they sat and the
+"judgment" given them signifies, I do not know for certain, but it is
+doubtless the same exalted privilege and authority which Christ promised
+to all his over-comers--to sit with him on his throne. Chap. 3:21.
+
+ 7. And when the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be
+ loosed out of his prison,
+
+ 8. And shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four
+ quarters of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them together to
+ battle: the number of whom is as the sand of the sea.
+
+ 9. And they went up on the breadth of the earth, and compassed
+ the camp of the saints about, and the beloved city: and fire
+ came down from God out of heaven, and devoured them.
+
+ 10. And the devil that deceived them was cast into the lake of
+ fire and brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet are,
+ and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever.
+
+The loosing of Satan, or the dragon, is the first important point to be
+considered. Before this matter can be rightly understood, however, we
+must take into account carefully certain facts regarding his binding. It
+was not the dragon as a political power that Christianity attacked (it
+did not labor to that end), but it was its huge public system of false
+belief that was overthrown. This great system, as opposed to
+Christianity, can all be summed up under the one word _infidelity_.
+_Infidel_ signifies "a heathen; one who disbelieves in Christ, or the
+divine origin and authority of Christianity."--Webster. This system was
+positively an antichristian power that sought by every possible means to
+destroy the religion of Jesus and to blot out his very name. It failed
+in the attempt. It was bound. During the long reign of Popery, when the
+doctrine was be-a-Catholic-or-die, infidelity could not publicly lift
+its head in the sense in which it was cast down by the early Christians.
+It had no power over the nations of the Apocalyptic earth to then
+deceive them; but they were greatly deceived by a false Christianity
+until almost all the world wondered after the beast. The release of the
+dragon, then, in order to be entirely satisfactory and consistent, must
+embrace the following points: First, it must at least include the
+development of a great public antichristian power whose avowed object is
+to destroy the whole fabric of Christianity. Second, being bound by
+divine power, his release must be the result of divine permission for a
+special purpose. Third, the scene of his imprisonment must necessarily
+be the place of his release; namely, the earth--the Apocalyptic
+earth--the territory of the Roman empire.
+
+We find all these requirements meeting a most perfect fulfilment in the
+events described under the pouring out of the first vial, which was done
+by the direction of Him that sat upon the throne. A sufficient history
+of that fearful system of infidelity which, through the labors of
+Voltaire and his coadjutors, spread throughout all Europe has already
+been given. The very object of the leaders of this movement was the
+extermination of the Christian religion, and their secret watchword was
+"Crush the wretch," meaning Jesus Christ. The dragon was loose in all
+his terrible features. The Pagans upheld a false belief; these modern
+worshipers of the dragon did likewise and publicly exalted the "Goddess
+of Reason" as an object of devotion, setting aside every tenth day for
+their hellish orgies in her honor. The former endeavored to overthrow
+the Christian religion; the latter had for its special aim the utter
+destruction of everything Christian either in name or in character. This
+devilish system spread over all Europe and almost undermined the whole
+fabric of society, and threatened to convert the world from Christianity
+to the worship of the Goddess of Reason. Its foothold gained was so
+extensive and its effects so far-reaching that prominent historians,
+D'Aubigne among the number, have denominated the period of its greatest
+triumph "the day of Reason." It is one of the three and one-half days
+covered by the prophecy in Rev. 11:9.
+
+I do not wish to be understood, however, as limiting the release of the
+dragon and his work to the system of infidelity that had its origin in
+France. I merely refer to that unfortunate system as the beginning of
+the dragon's release and work--the re-introduction to the world of those
+principles of public hostility to Christianity which had lain buried
+since the days of Pagan Rome. The dragon in the beginning was a
+deceptive system, one that "deceived the whole world"; but its
+deceptions were uncovered by the light of Christianity, and then it
+became the bitter public opposer of the religion of Christ. In the
+release of the dragon the order is reversed. He first appears as the
+public enemy of Christianity in the form already mentioned, but
+afterwards changes his tactics to milder methods in order the better to
+"deceive" the people, as we shall see hereafter.
+
+But there is another chapter in the history of the dragon's career that
+we must not overlook--his partnership with Gog and Magog. The original
+signification of the terms _Gog and Magog_ is difficult to ascertain, as
+all known accounts are conflicting. The terms occur in Ezek. 38 and 39
+also. In the Revelation, however, it is clear that these terms are
+applied to Romanism and Protestantism, and under the special leadership
+of this spirit of antichrist they are gathered together to battle
+against the saints of the most High. I will again quote the description
+of this union as given under the sixth vial, which refers to the present
+time: "And I saw three unclean spirits like frogs come out of the mouth
+of the dragon, and out of the mouth of the beast, and out of the mouth
+of the false prophet. For they are the spirits of devils, working
+miracles, which go forth unto the kings of the earth and of the whole
+world, to gather them to the battle of that great day of God
+Almighty.... And he gathered them into a place called in the Hebrew
+tongue Armageddon." Chap. 16:13-16. It will be noticed that the field of
+operations under this grand confederation of the three unclean spirits
+is enlarged so that it includes not merely the Apocalyptic earth, but
+"the whole world."
+
+In order to form a confederation of powers each of which holds its own
+distinctive principles, it is necessary that each make certain
+concessions, in outward appearance at least, so that they can work
+together in harmony against a common foe. In this case it will be
+necessary that three points be conceded before the dragon, the beast,
+and the false prophet can agree. First, the dragon must not appear in
+his true character as antichristian; he must be clothed in some
+different attire in order to "deceive." Second, Catholicism must stop
+her work of slaying those who disagree with her and cover up her true
+principles. Third, Protestantism must cease protesting against the
+abominations of Catholicism. We are living in the time when this
+confederation of the powers of wickedness is being effected; therefore
+we must not expect to see the dragon as a terrible creature with heads
+and horns standing as the open adversary of God, but we must look for
+him dressed up in a garb "to deceive." If necessary he can place himself
+under a Christian garb without violating his conscience--of which he has
+none.
+
+It will perhaps be beneficial to give the reader a short account of some
+of the forms under which the dragon is manifesting himself at the
+present time in order to "deceive" the people. It will be remembered
+that, in the description of the first vial, which represented the awful
+system of infidelity that was spread over Europe, Dr. Adam Weishaupt of
+the University of Ingolstadt, formed a secret society under the name of
+the Illuminati in order the better to spread these wicked principles. A
+quotation was also made showing that "_Freemasonry_ being in high repute
+all over Europe when Weishaupt first formed the plan of his society, he
+availed himself of its secrecy to introduce his new order, which rapidly
+spread, by the efforts of its founders and disciples, through all those
+countries." Now, if Freemasonry was such an excellent channel for the
+dragon to begin his work through, is it not reasonable to suppose that
+he would still retain his position in that order, and especially since
+_the very name of Christ_ is barred from its rites, rules, and
+ceremonies? And this thought is especially convincing when we consider
+the fact that Freemasonry is in its very nature and constitution only a
+form of Paganism. This vast body is founded on what they call the
+"ancient mysteries." The following is taken from Masonic Salvation by
+Fred Husted:
+
+"Warburton says: 'Each of the Pagan gods had (beside the public and
+open) a secret worship paid unto him, to which none were admitted but
+those who had been selected by preparatory ceremonies called initiation.
+This secret worship was called "the mysteries."'
+
+"Mackey, another member of this order, says: 'These mysteries existed in
+every country of heathendom, in each under a different name, and to some
+extent under a different form, but always and everywhere with the same
+design of inculcating (teaching) by allegorical and symbolical teachings
+the great Masonic doctrines of the unity of God and the immortality of
+the soul. This one important proposition and the fact which it
+enumerates (states) must never be lost sight of, in any inquiry into the
+origin of Freemasonry; for the Pagan mysteries were to the spurious
+Freemasonry of antiquity precisely what the Masters' lodges are to the
+Freemasonry of the present day.'
+
+"This is certainly a frank statement, coming as it does from a man who
+is an acknowledged and highly esteemed authority in matters pertaining
+to the craft. Daniel Sickles says, 'In Egypt, Greece, and many other
+ancient nations Freemasonry, that is, the Mysteries, was one of the
+earliest agencies employed to effect the improvement and enlightenment
+of man.' Pierson says, 'The identity of the Masonic institutions with
+the ancient Mysteries is obvious,' which means clearly to be seen,
+manifest to any and all.
+
+"Masons say that the order is founded on the Bible--that is, unlearned
+Masons say so. Geo. Wingate Chase, in the Digest of Masonic Law, says:
+'The Jews, the Turks, each reject either the New Testament or the Old or
+both, and yet we see no good reasons why they should not be made Masons.
+In fact, Blue Lodge [first three degrees] Masonry has nothing whatever
+to do with the Bible. It is not founded on the Bible. If it were, it
+would not be Masonry; it would be something else.'
+
+"Sickles says in speaking of the third, or Master Mason's degree, 'There
+are characters impressed upon it which can not be mistaken. _It is
+thoroughly Egyptian_.' He further says that the tradition is older by a
+thousand years than Solomon. 'That our [Masonic] rites embrace all the
+possible circumstances of man, moral, social, and spiritual, and have a
+meaning high as the heavens, broad as the universe, and profound as
+eternity.' Sickles in Gen. Chiman Rezon.
+
+"The writer was informed when the charges were given him 'that our
+ancient brethren worshiped in high hills and in low vales, and that
+guards were placed to keep off cowans or eves-droppers.' By referring to
+Scripture we at once find the character of those who worshiped in high
+hills and low vales, and why they needed a guard to keep off
+eves-droppers. 'Thou saidst, I will not transgress; when upon every high
+hill and under every green tree thou wanderest, playing the harlot.'
+Jer. 2:20; 3:6. 'Ye shall utterly destroy all the places, wherein the
+nations which ye shall possess served other gods, upon the high
+mountains, and upon the hills, and under every green tree.' Deut. 12:2.
+'Enflaming themselves with idols under every green tree, slaying the
+children in the vales under the clifts of the rocks.... Even thither
+wentest thou up to offer sacrifice.' Isa. 57:5-7. They were not afraid
+of Ahab and Jezebel (2 Kings 7:10; 1 Kings 14:23), and they grew and
+multiplied in their reigns, and in the reigns of all those of whom it is
+recorded that 'they did that which was evil in the sight of the Lord.'
+Some of the kings of Israel and of Judah destroyed their high places for
+them and were highly favored of God for so doing.
+
+"Again, 'The precepts of Jesus could not have been made obligatory upon
+a Jew. A Christian would have denied the sanction of the Koran. A
+Mohammedan must have rejected the law of Moses, and a disciple of
+Zoroaster would have turned from all, to the teaching of his
+Zend-Avesta. The universal law of nature, which the authors of the old
+charges have properly called the moral, is therefore the _only law_
+suited in every respect to be adopted as the Masonic code.' Mackeys'
+Textbook, Masonic Jurisprudence. If the statements just quoted do not
+place the secret society of Masonry on a footing decidedly Pagan, it is
+difficult to say just where it does stand....
+
+"Tammuz, or Osiris of Egypt, who is declared to be the original of Hiram
+Abiff the temple-builder, is still mourned for. Ezek. 8:14. See Young's
+Analytical Concordance or any standard Greek Mythology. Now see
+Piersons' Traditions of Freemasonry. 'The Masonic legend stands by
+itself, unsupported by history, or other than its own traditions. Yet we
+readily recognize in Hiram Abiff the Osiris of the Egyptians, the
+Mithras of the Persians, the Bacchus of the Greeks [god of drunkenness,
+or feasts and the like], the Dionysis of the fraternity of artificers,
+and the Atys of the Phrygians, whose passions, deaths, and resurrections
+were celebrated by these people respectively.' Thus it is clearly shown
+that each of these ancient nations had its counterfeit Savior and
+Redeemer, and it is here proved by the words of Masonic Grand Masters,
+authors, and authorities, that Masonry is of Pagan origin."
+
+When we think of the millions of devotees of this form of Paganism,
+multitudes of church-members and preachers, surely it is not difficult
+to see that the dragon is loose in deceiving power again. That he is
+meeting with great success in forming his confederation of all false
+religions, is obvious. The world's Parliament of Religions, held in
+Chicago in the year 1893, is an illustration of this statement. The
+dragon, the beast, and the false prophet met in "mutual confidence and
+respect," a "brotherhood" of religions. Theism, Judaism, Mohammedanism,
+Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, Shintoism, Zoroastrianism,
+Catholicism, the Greek Church, and Protestantism in many forms--all
+these were represented. And the devotees of these religions met, as they
+said, "To unite all religion against all irreligion; to make the golden
+rule the basis of this union; and to present to the world _substantial
+unity of many religions_." The following are a few extracts from
+addresses made before the Parliament.
+
+President Charles Carroll Bonney, in the opening address, said:
+"Worshipers of God and lovers of man: Let us rejoice that we have lived
+to see this glorious day.... That we are permitted to take part in this
+solemn and majestic event of a World's Congress of Religions. The
+importance of this event can not be overestimated. Its influence on the
+future relations of the various races of men, can not be too highly
+esteemed. If this Congress shall faithfully execute its duties with
+which it has been charged, it shall become the joy of the whole earth,
+and stand in human history like a _new Mount Zion_, crowned with glory,
+and marking the actual beginning of a _new epoch of brotherhood_ and
+peace. _For when the religious faiths of the world recognize each other
+as brothers, children of one Father_, whom all profess to love and
+serve, then, and not until then, will the nations of the earth yield to
+the spirit of concord and learn war no more.... We meet on the mountain
+height of absolute respect for the religious convictions of each
+other.... This day the sun of a new era of religious peace and progress
+arises over the world, dispelling the dark clouds of sectarian strife.
+_It is the brotherhood of religions._"
+
+Chairman John Henry Barrows, in his address, said: "We are here not as
+Baptists and Buddhists, Catholics and Confucians, Parsees and
+Presbyterians, Methodists and Moslems; we are here as members of a
+Parliament of Religions, over which flies no sectarian flag, ... but
+where for the first time in large council is lifted up the banner of
+love, fellowship, brotherhood.... Welcome, one and all, thrice welcome
+to the world's first Parliament of Religions! Welcome to the men and
+women of Israel, the standing miracle of nations and religions! Welcome
+to the disciples of Prince Siddartha, the many millions who worship
+their lord Buddha as the light of Asia! Welcome to the high-priests of
+the national religion of Japan! This city has every reason to be
+grateful to the enlightened ruler of 'the sunrise kingdom.' Welcome to
+the men of India, and all faiths! Welcome to all the disciples of
+Christ! ... It seems to me that the spirits of just and good men hover
+over this assembly. I believe the spirit of Paul is here. I believe the
+spirit of the wise and humane Buddha is here, and of Socrates the
+searcher after truth.... When a few days ago I met for the first time
+the delegates who have come to us from Japan, and shortly after the
+delegates who have come to us from India, I felt that the arms of human
+brotherhood had reached almost around the globe." World's Parliament of
+Religions, Chap. III. Similar congresses have since been held. While I
+never expect to see all these principles of evil under one organized
+form, yet it is evident that the spirits of devils that have gone forth
+into "all the world" are uniting them all under one _spirit_--that of
+Antichrist.
+
+Another form in which the old dragon is manifesting himself and uniting
+thousands of people against the truth, and one in which the "miracles"
+ascribed to this latest confederation of Satan are performed, is that of
+"Christian Science." Attracted by its healing doctrine, multitudes are
+lured into this deceptive communion of Mrs. Eddy's. At the very best her
+system is, as every historian knows, only a slight revision of the
+Oriental Philosophy; and notwithstanding its forged name _Christian_, it
+is truly subversive of the doctrine of Christ. Her grand central
+doctrine of the "allness" of mind and the unreality of matter is a true
+copy of the "fantastic idealism" of the Gnostics. Gnosticism was based
+on "speculative knowledge." So is Mrs. Eddy's theory. Gnosticism denied
+the "_true humanity_ of the Redeemer, and made his person a mere
+phantom, and his work a mere illusion." So does Christian Science.
+Although Mrs. Eddy clamours loudly that her work is _Christian_ and her
+multitude of followers believe her claim, still a careful study of her
+work Science and Health will convince any unprejudiced person that she
+utterly repudiates the atonement-work of Jesus Christ by denying his
+person and the reality of sin and matter. Though the system may contain
+some good moral principles, yet it has no power to save men from sin,
+since it denies the existence of actual sin. Her denial of the one
+personal God--"all is infinite mind, and its infinite manifestations,"--
+is but a swing of the pendulum from the godless and graceless system of
+the materialistic philosophy propounded by Darwin and Haeckel and is as
+absurd and unscriptural (although opposite) as the rankest Pantheism.
+
+The salvation of the soul through faith in Jesus Christ has absolutely
+no place in the Christian Science creed. It is nothing but a species of
+universalism. Individuals of every evil class and character--
+self-lovers, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to
+parents, unthankful, unholy, without natural affection, trucebreakers,
+false accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good,
+traitors, heady, highminded, lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God,
+profane, murderers of fathers and mothers, man-slayers, whoremongers,
+liars, drunkards, sorcerers, perjured persons, backbiters, haters of
+God, despiteful, inventors of evil things, implacable, unmerciful,
+abominable, and those unto every good work reprobate--any and all of
+these characters can and do come to the healers of Christian Science,
+and _not one word is said to them about getting salvation_ through
+repentance and living faith in the Savior; but, on the other hand, they
+are received as follows: "As _children of God_ you have a right to the
+healing of your bodies"! The dragon is in it! I warn people to beware.
+"They are the spirits of devils, working miracles," and form an
+important proof that we are near the end of time.
+
+Another form in which the dragon is manifesting his power on the
+deceptive and miracle-working line is modern Spiritualism. Multitudes of
+people of all classes are believers in this soul-destroying doctrine.
+The system is generally acknowledged to be but a modern form of what was
+anciently styled witchcraft, necromancy, magic, etc., while the mediums
+of to-day are of the same class as those formerly known as "witches,"
+"sorcerers," "magicians." This they themselves often admit. The system
+is so well known both in doctrine and in its pernicious effects that I
+will not devote further space to the matter.[15] In many other forms the
+dragon is working his deceptions upon the people.
+
+[Footnote 15: For further consideration of this subject read the book
+"Modern Spiritualism Exposed," by the publishers of this work.]
+
+Millions of church-members and thousands of preachers are numbered among
+these antichristian organizations of Freemasonry, Christian Science,
+Spiritualism, etc., etc., gathered together under the influence of the
+spirits of devils working miracles, mighty signs, and wonders. On the
+other hand, the churches are filled with persons who in spirit are
+nothing but skeptics and infidels. Said T. De Witt Talmage on one
+occasion, "There is a mighty host in the Christian church, positively
+professing Christianity, who _do not believe the Bible_, out and out, in
+and in, from the first word of the first verse of the first chapter of
+the Book of Genesis, down to the last word of the last verse of the last
+chapter of the Book of Revelation." Is it any wonder that such is the
+case when a large number of the preachers themselves are in reality
+skeptics? A newspaper clipping before me contains the following, uttered
+on March 28, 1905, by the Rev. B.A. Green, pastor of the First Baptist
+Church, of Evanstown, Ill., before about a hundred of his fellow
+ministers: "All the truth in the world is not contained in one book, nor
+in books of theology, God was too big for one temple and he is also too
+big for one book. God is everywhere. His truth is found in all good
+books. The pastor of to-day should read the modern psychology and modern
+literature, _especially the works of fiction_ which deal with religious
+or social phases of modern life." A large portion of the sectarian
+ministry reject entirely the Mosaic account of the creation, and accept
+instead the modern theory of evolution.
+
+The following quotation is from the Rev. Minton J. Savage, pastor of the
+Church of the Messiah, New York, N.Y., who is an acknowledged leader in
+the "higher criticism." This was in answer to an attack made on the
+higher critics by a convention of the American Bible League. "The men
+who are leading in the higher criticism of the Bible and who are now
+being assailed so bitterly by the American Bible League, are
+representative scholars of the world, scientific thinkers, leaders,
+teachers, who have given us a new universe, a new conception of God, a
+new idea concerning the origin and nature of man. They are not seeking
+to support or to undermine anything. They are seeking for the truth as
+the only sacred thing on earth.
+
+"I would like to consider what this book is about over which all this
+controversy is raging. It is really not one book, but sixty-six small
+volumes. They were written during a period of nearly a thousand years,
+in different countries, by different people. The first book was written
+about eight hundred years before Christ. The first five books of the
+Bible were written between five and six hundred years before Christ. The
+historical books tell us about the day of Judges, then of Kings, the
+wars of Israel, until the time of captivity. Then the book of Job,
+purely anonymous, and no one knows who wrote it. Then the book of the
+Psalms, the hymn-book of the people of Israel, and the books of the
+prophets. It would be more proper to call them preachers, for they make
+no effort to foretell anything, but merely told the people that if they
+followed certain lines of conduct certain things would happen.
+
+"No book was placed in the Bible by anything that claimed to be divine
+authority. No law concerning the Biblical canon was ever issued by the
+church earlier than the sixteenth century and that changed nothing; it
+simply recognized what had come to be a fact. These books drifted
+together and came to be bound as one, by force of gravity, by common
+consent, and there are one or two books in the New Testament which
+scholars could miss without feeling any the poorer.
+
+"Nobody, then, is assaulting the Bible, for the simple reason that the
+Bible as such has never made any claim. The Bible does not claim to be
+inspired; it does not claim to be infallible. No writer of one book is
+authorized to speak for the author of any other book. One verse is
+sometimes referred to as meaning something. The writer of the last book
+in the Bible utters a curse against anybody who should presume to add to
+or take from the words of that book. He does not say that the book is
+infallible; he simple curses anybody that interferes with it, as
+Shakespeare uttered a curse against anybody who interfered with his
+bones. I suppose that God might have given us an infallible book, if he
+had chosen, and if he had given us such a book he would have made us
+sure that it was infallible."
+
+"If I were compelled to believe that God holds me responsible for Adam's
+sin and that the immense majority of the world is doomed to everlasting
+torment, and that only a selected few here and there are to enter
+eternal felicity, I might bow my head and accept it, but I could not
+rejoice in it. It is barbarous. Men who try to make us accept such
+dogmas are the real infidels of the world, and it is infidelity which
+they are creating--infidelity a hundred times worse than that which they
+call by the name. If you would blot out every Bible in the world to-day
+you would not even endanger its life, nor would you destroy religion."
+From _The Toledo News-Bee_, May 14, 1904.
+
+All these allied powers of wickedness in conflict with the few of God's
+saints who serve him acceptably, constitute the battle of
+Armageddon--that battle of the last great day. It is not a literal
+collecting of armies nor a literal conflict, but a fierce battle between
+truth and error. The outward indications are that the enemies of God
+will triumph; but let us remember that it is destined to "end in the
+victory of Him unto whom triumph belongs." Fire will come down from God
+out of heaven and devour them. This symbol is doubtless taken from the
+circumstance of Elijah where he commanded fire to come down and destroy
+his enemies; and it will be as with such an overthrow that the powers of
+wickedness shall meet their doom in that last great day of God Almighty.
+
+ 11. And I saw a great white throne, and him that sat on it, from
+ whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was
+ found no place for them.
+
+ 12. And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; and
+ the books were opened; and another book was opened, which is the
+ book of life: and the dead were judged out of those things which
+ were written in the books, according to their works.
+
+ 13. And the sea gave up the dead which were in it; and death and
+ hell delivered up the dead which were in them: and they were
+ judged every man according to their works.
+
+ 14. And death and hell were cast, into the lake of fire. This is
+ the second death.
+
+ 15. And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was
+ cast into the lake of fire.
+
+This series of events, as far as it pertains to the doom of evil men,
+ends properly with verse 10, where the combined powers of wickedness are
+represented as being cast into the lake of fire. This last event,
+however, is in the present scene more fully described. It is fitting
+that the judgment scene should be more fully described; for with this
+chapter we have the last special history of the powers of evil given.
+Many times we have been led up to the time of the final overthrow of all
+the powers of wickedness, but the manner in which that great event
+occurs has not been perfectly detailed.
+
+Here we have another illustration of that principle of symbolic language
+laid down in the beginning--that objects and events whose nature forbids
+their symbolization appear under their own names or titles and their
+description must of necessity be literal. The appearance of the great
+God must be considered an actual event; for, as clearly shown, he can
+not be symbolized, neither can he appear as the symbol of some other
+object, from the fact that there is no other object of analagous nature
+of which he could stand as the representative. The resurrection of
+itself is an event of such a peculiar nature as to forbid its
+symbolization. What is there analagous to it which could here be
+employed? There are, perhaps, analagous changes in the vegetable and
+animal kingdoms; but symbols drawn from that quarter would indicate some
+political change instead. Paul may, indeed, speak of the decay and the
+growth of seeds to _illustrate_ the resurrection; but the decay of a
+seed does not _symbolize_ the death of a saint, neither does its
+germination _symbolize_ his resurrection. Nor is there any change that
+can do it. There is the same necessity of speaking of the resurrection
+in its literal meaning as there was of representing the spirits of the
+martyrs under their own appropriate titles.
+
+The earth and the heaven fleeing away from before God's presence so that
+no place is found for them, must be understood as describing the literal
+dissolution of this world when Christ comes; for it is clear from the
+Scriptures that such an event will occur at that time. Peter says that
+"the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which
+_the heavens shall pass away_ with a great noise, and the elements shall
+melt with fervent heat, _the earth also_ and the works that are therein
+_shall be burned up_." 2 Pet. 3:10. Nothing can be found to symbolize
+perfectly such a mighty event; hence it appears as a literal description
+of the final catastrophe of this old world.
+
+It is evident that there are symbols connected with this appearance of
+God, as truly as there were symbols connected with Christ in his
+appearance in chap. 19. The _throne_ is a symbol of judgment and of
+supreme sovereignty, its dazzling whiteness indicating the impartiality
+and justice of the proceedings. The _books_, likewise, are symbols. We
+are not to suppose that there are literal books in heaven, in which
+Christ or some angelic secretary notes down all the affairs of earth.
+The language and the symbols of Scripture are accommodated to the human
+understanding, hence books are used as a symbol to denote that the
+character and the actions of men are all as perfectly known and
+remembered as if they had been recorded in the archives of heaven. The
+_book of life_, in which the names of the faithful are often said to be
+inscribed, denotes that God knows all his chosen people. In the
+following chapter it is called the Lamb's book of life.
+
+This scene, then, as a whole, is a sublime description of the
+resurrection and the final judgment of all men and the dissolution of
+the earth on which we now live. That the righteous will be judged at
+this time is shown by the fact that the book of life, in which the names
+of the righteous only are recorded (Chap. 21:27; Exod. 32:33), will also
+be opened; and verse fifteen implies that the names of some during this
+judgment scene were found recorded in that book. The wicked receive
+their eternal portion by being cast into the lake of fire; while the
+reward of the righteous is described in the remaining part of this
+series, contained in the two following chapters.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+
+ And I saw a new heaven and a new earth: for the first heaven and
+ the first earth were passed away; and there was no more sea.
+
+ 2. And I John saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from
+ God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband.
+
+ 3. And I heard a great voice out of heaven saying, Behold, the
+ tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and
+ they shall be his people, and God himself shall be with them,
+ and be their God.
+
+ 4. And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there
+ shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither
+ shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed
+ away.
+
+The events of this chapter are a continuation of the series of prophecy
+considered in the preceding one, only describing an entirely different
+phase--the final reward and eternal home of God's people. We have traced
+many series of prophecies through the long weary pathway of centuries,
+only to find the termination of the powers of wickedness in the lake of
+fire at the end of time or their overthrow otherwise set forth under
+appropriate symbols; but in no instance has the final reward of God's
+people after the judgment been fully described. That glorious event of
+the future was referred to in chap. 7 as the final in-gathering of the
+redeemed "of all nations, and kindreds, and people, and tongues." The
+description however, was incomplete. Since the eternal abode of the
+wicked is referred to often, the subject would seem incomplete without a
+description of the final glories and triumphs of the redeemed in their
+future and eternal home. Though their earthly pilgrimage is fraught with
+sorrow, death, pain, wretchedness, and misery, by the hands of their
+violent oppressors, yet they shall witness the complete overthrow of all
+their enemies in the lake that burns with fire and brimstone, and they
+themselves shall be rewarded eternally; for "God shall wipe away all
+tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow,
+neither crying, neither shall there be any more pain; for the former
+things are passed away." It is fitting that such a sublime theme should
+be reserved as the grand climax of the book of Revelation.
+
+With the dissolution of the earth on which we live, which event has just
+been described, it is evident that the many lines of prophecy leading up
+to that great event are no longer under special consideration, but that
+a new theme subsequent to the judgment scene is introduced with the
+words of the Revelator immediately following--"I saw _a new heaven and a
+new earth:_ for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away;
+and there was no more sea." The heaven, earth, and sea that passed away
+certainly refers to the earth that now is and to the aerial heaven
+surrounding it; therefore the new heaven and the new earth brought to
+view must signify the future and eternal home that Jesus went to
+prepare. We could not consistently make the one literal and the other
+symbolical. This accords perfectly with the teaching of the apostle
+Peter where he says: "The day of the Lord will come as a thief in the
+night; in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and
+the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and the works
+that are therein shall be burned up.... Nevertheless we, according to
+his promise, look for _new heavens and a new earth_, wherein dwelleth
+righteousness." 2 Pet. 3:10-13.
+
+The holy city of God, the New Jerusalem, is next introduced. Since this
+meets its fulfilment in the new order of things subsequent to the
+judgment scene, it must have special reference to the future abode of
+the saints in the new earth. Many of the symbols here describing the New
+Jerusalem, and even New Jerusalem itself, are often used to set forth
+the church of God in the New Testament dispensation. The church on earth
+and the church of God in heaven are in one important sense the same
+thing, as they constitute but one family (Eph. 3:15); yet in another
+sense there is a difference, and the proper distinction must be observed
+even when the same symbols or titles are used to describe or designate
+both phases. A similar two-foldness is seen in many lines of truth. In
+Heb. 12:22, 23, we are represented as dwelling in the city of God in
+this dispensation; yet verse 27 of this chapter and the fourteenth of
+the following chapter plainly show our entrance into the city at the
+end. The Scriptures represent God as dwelling on earth in his church,
+which, of course, is considered in a spiritual sense; but his actual
+throne and place of abode is in heaven. A new creation brought about by
+Christ in his first advent is set forth by various texts; still, it
+remains a fact that a new creation will actually be brought to view
+after the present world is no more and that the same will be our eternal
+home. We obtain spiritual life through Christ now, hence have right to
+the tree of life; yet in another sense our access to the tree of life is
+at the end and we then enter in through the gates into the city. Chap.
+22:14. Hence it is proper to speak of the city of God as both present
+and future, by observing the proper distinction, just as the Scriptures
+speak of the church in a twofold sense as being both on earth and in
+heaven, or of the spiritual kingdom in the present and the eternal
+kingdom in the end. It is Scriptural to speak of God's throne as being
+on earth in the midst of his saints in a spiritual sense and also of its
+being located in heaven. The tree of life is a present realization
+spiritually and also a future reality. We dwell in the city of God
+now--in the suburbs, as it were--but we shall "have a right" to it in
+the future state when we are ushered into the very heart of the great
+metropolis and stand before the actual throne of the Deity, in the
+presence of his August Majesty.
+
+In the New Testament dispensation the heavenly elements of the New
+Jerusalem have descended to earth in the form of the new covenant, and
+God's people obtain a foretaste of heaven's glory and are made pure even
+as Christ is pure, and are therefore represented as having "come unto
+Mount Sion, and unto the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem"
+(Heb. 12:22, 23); and God dwells with them in a very important sense. 2
+Cor. 6:16. They are one with the redeemed above, and together they
+constitute one "family in heaven and earth," all loving the same Father,
+adoring the same King, drinking from the same fountain of life eternal,
+and all basking in the same divine light that beams from the throne of
+God. In another sense, however, there is a difference between them; for
+they are separated by the line of mortality, one phase being located on
+earth and the other in heaven. But when at the last day the redeemed of
+earth have access to the tree of life in its perfect sense, there will
+be henceforth only one phase to the New Jerusalem, or church of God,
+which will be in its relation to the new earth, as specially described
+in the prophecy under consideration, when "_all things_" are made new
+and "the former things are passed away."
+
+ 5. And he that sat upon the throne said, Behold, I make all
+ things new. And he said unto me, Write: for these words are true
+ and faithful.
+
+ 6. And he said unto me, It is done. I am Alpha and Omega, the
+ beginning and the end. I will give unto him that is athirst of
+ the fountain of the water of life freely.
+
+ 7. He that overcometh shall inherit all things; and I will be
+ his God, and he shall be my son.
+
+ 8. But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and
+ murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and
+ all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with
+ fire and brimstone: which is the second death.
+
+The declarations contained in these verses proceed from God himself and
+announce the fact that he hath now fulfilled all that he designed. His
+promises to his faithful children are brought to pass, as well as his
+threatening to his foes. All things are made new and the former things
+are passed away. Not only has the strife, the commotion, and the sin in
+the old order of things passed away, but the new creation, wherein
+dwelleth righteousness, has been introduced, the grand long-looked-for
+era of eternal blessedness to the saints. Oh, halleluiah! "And he said
+unto me, Write: for these words are true and faithful."
+
+"And he said unto me, It is done. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning
+and the end." When the seventh angel of chap. 16:17 poured out his vial,
+the voice of God from the throne said, "It is done," signifying that the
+last judgments were complete. Here again the same voice is heard as
+before, referring to the same thing--the accomplishment of God's great
+purposes. The enemies of the church have been overthrown, her long
+period of warfare has ended, and the eternal day of Zion's glory has
+come. Then follow his blessed promises held out to the faithful, and
+also the reward to the wicked. These are to be understood as referring
+to these classes, not at the day of judgment, but when the Revelation
+was given to John and therefore to us. "I will give unto him that is
+athirst of the fountain of the water of life freely. He that overcometh
+shall inherit all things [in the margin, _these things_]: and I will be
+his God, and he shall be my son." "This is the reward in reserve for
+those who endure through this period of trial and overcome at last. They
+shall drink of living waters, which will be sweet and refreshing indeed
+to those who have toiled through this fight; and they shall inherit
+these things--these new heavens and earth. God shall be their God, and
+they his sons. Oh, what an honor! what a destiny in reserve for the
+faithful! with what glorious anticipations may the believer look forward
+to the revelations of that day, and with Paul say, 'If by any means I
+may attain unto the resurrection of the dead.'
+
+"What warning also to the wicked! The same voice that utters the
+promise, pronounces also the threatening. 'The fearful, and unbelieving,
+and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and
+idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part in the lake which
+burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the second death.' God says,
+'These words are true and faithful.' They came from him who sat upon the
+throne, the Alpha and Omega. He has put his everlasting seal to them,
+and pledged his veracity to their truth." Dear reader, will you accept
+the word of Him who can not lie and choose to suffer affliction with the
+people of God until our Lord shall come to call his ransomed home? Or
+will you decide to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season, only to be
+resurrected at the last great day to "shame and everlasting contempt"?
+There is no intimation of future salvation for the transgressor. The
+lake of fire still stands as the symbol of eternal destruction, and into
+it the fearful and unbelieving and wicked of every name are cast.
+
+ 9. And there came unto me one of the seven angels which had the
+ seven vials full of the seven last plagues, and talked with me,
+ saying, Come hither, I will show thee the bride, the Lamb's
+ wife.
+
+ 10. And he carried me away in the spirit to a great and high
+ mountain, and showed me that great city, the holy Jerusalem,
+ descending out of heaven from God,
+
+ 11. Having the glory of God: and her light was like unto a stone
+ most precious, even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal;
+
+ 12. And had a wall great and high, and had twelve gates, and at
+ the gates twelve angels, and names written thereon, which are
+ the names of the twelve tribes of the children of Israel:
+
+ 13. On the east three gates; on the north three gates; on the
+ south three gates; and on the west three gates.
+
+ 14. And the wall of the city had twelve foundations, and in them
+ the names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb.
+
+ 15. And he that talked with me had a golden reed to measure the
+ city, and the gates thereof, and the wall thereof.
+
+ 16. And the city lieth foursquare, and the length is as large as
+ the breadth: and he measured the city with the reed, twelve
+ thousand furlongs. The length and the breadth and the height of
+ it are equal.
+
+ 17. And he measured the wall thereof, an hundred and forty and
+ four cubits, according to the measure of a man, that is, of the
+ angel.
+
+ 18. And the building of the wall of it was of jasper: and the
+ city was pure gold, like unto clear glass.
+
+ 19. And the foundations of the wall of the city were garnished
+ with all manner of precious stones. The first foundation was
+ jasper; the second, sapphire; the third, a chalcedony; the
+ fourth, an emerald;
+
+ 20. The fifth, sardonyx; the sixth, sardius; the seventh,
+ chrysolyte; the eighth, beryl; the ninth, a topaz; the tenth, a
+ chrysoprasus; the eleventh, a jacinth; the twelfth, an amethyst.
+
+ 21. And the twelve gates were twelve pearls; every several gate
+ was of one pearl: and the street of the city was pure gold, as
+ it were transparent glass.
+
+ 22. And I saw no temple therein: for the Lord God Almighty and
+ the Lamb are the temple of it.
+
+ 23. And the city had no need of the sun, neither of the moon, to
+ shine in it: for the glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb
+ is the light thereof.
+
+ 24. And the nations of them which are saved shall walk in the
+ light of it: and the kings of the earth do bring their glory and
+ honor into it.
+
+ 25. And the gates of it shall not be shut at all by day: for
+ there shall be no night there.
+
+ 26. And they shall bring the glory and honor of the nations into
+ it.
+
+ 27. And there shall in no wise enter into it any thing that
+ defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination, or maketh a
+ lie: but they which are written in the Lamb's book of life.
+
+We have here a magnificent description of the New Jerusalem,
+representing the home of the redeemed. The various symbols employed in
+its description must of course he understood as symbolical. We have no
+means of knowing just what our future home will be like; but that it
+will be a place of wondrous beauty and transcendent glory is shown by
+the fact that everything which is considered grand and glorious in this
+world is here chosen to represent the home of the redeemed. The symbols
+selected to describe it are objects of such priceless worth, even
+exceeding royal splendor, that we pause in astonishment and exclaim,
+"What must the reality be?" The conditions upon which entrance to this
+city may be obtained (ver. 27; chap. 22:14) show clearly that our future
+and eternal home is the chief burden of this vision and not merely our
+spiritual inheritance in this world.
+
+"In approaching Jerusalem, the traveller is not aware of its proximity,
+until, ascending an eminence, the glorious city bursts upon his
+astonished vision, when he is ready to exclaim with the
+Psalmist--'Beautiful for situation, the joy of the whole earth is Mount
+Zion, on the sides of the north, the city of the great king.'" Psa.
+48:2. John was carried to "a great and high mountain," from which
+commanding point of view he was enabled to survey in all its boundless
+extent the surpassing glories of the New Jerusalem. Never did
+imagination conceive anything approaching the sublimity and grandeur of
+the scene here described by the pen of inspiration. It was "a great
+city"--how great we shall soon discover--the _holy_ Jerusalem,
+descending out of heaven from God.
+
+The ancient city of Jerusalem was regarded as sacred because in it God
+had recorded his name, and it contained his holy temple, his place of
+residence on earth. Thither the tribes of Israel went up to worship;
+"Jerusalem is the place where men ought to worship." So, also, this New
+Jerusalem was "_the holy city_," an antitype of the former. It is
+described as "having the glory of God, and her light was like unto a
+stone most precious, even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal." "The
+glory of God" was that visible manifestation, called the Shekinah, which
+Jehovah made of himself in the tabernacle of his ancient people. The
+following facts concerning it will give us an understanding of its
+signification as connected with the New Jerusalem:
+
+"Jehovah was the accepted King and Lawgiver of his people Israel, and he
+had his tabernacle among them, where he abode by his presence, where he
+might be approached and consulted, and make communications of his will.
+That visible presence was 'the glory of God' or the Shekinah; and the
+Jews regarded it with the highest possible veneration, as the embodiment
+of the Deity. The sacred writers often speak of it in the same terms as
+of Jehovah himself. They refer to this when they speak of _seeing God_.
+'Then went up Moses and Aaron, Nadab and Abihu, and seventy of the
+elders of Israel, _and they saw the God of Israel_.' Ex. 24:9, 10. 'I
+saw also the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, and his
+train filled the temple.' Isa. 6:1. And again in verse 5: 'For mine eyes
+_have seen_ the King, the Lord of hosts.' The spiritual essence of God
+can not, of course, be revealed to mortal vision, yet there was a
+manifestation of the Deity which was made visible to the eyes of men,
+and which Moses and Isaiah speak of as _seeing God_. It is spoken of as
+the _presence_ and _face_ of Jehovah. 'And he said, _My presence_ shall
+go with thee, and I will give thee rest.' Ex. 33:14. 'And the Lord spake
+unto Moses _face to face_, as a man speaketh unto his friend.' Ex.
+33:11."
+
+The New Jerusalem that John saw descending from God--which denotes its
+heavenly origin--had "the glory of God: and her light was like unto a
+stone most precious, even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal." It
+dazzled as the purest diamond. In verse 23 we are informed that it
+illuminated the whole city so that there was "no need of the sun,
+neither of the moon, to shine in it: for the _glory of God did lighten
+it, and the Lamb is the light thereof_." In ancient times "the glory of
+God" filled the _tabernacle_, the place of his abode; but here it filled
+_the whole city_. In that tabernacle the Shekinah was the manifestation
+of the divine glory of Jehovah. In the New Jerusalem Jesus Christ, who
+is "the brightness of his glory, and the express image of his person,"
+illuminates the entire city of God. Oh, halleluiah!
+
+In olden times the cities were surrounded with walls, designed as a
+defense against all enemies. The more important the city, the higher and
+stronger were the walls built. Having walls, it was necessary also to
+have gates to furnish ingress and egress to the inhabitants. These gates
+were in charge of faithful guardians, who had authority to open and to
+close them according to the regulations of the city. In accordance with
+this idea the city of God is represented as having "a wall great and
+high." This wall represents the security of Zion, whose inhabitants
+within can rest in peace and safety. The three gates on each side
+represent the free and easy access into the city from every quarter.
+Anciently, it was customary to give names to the gates of a city, just
+as we now do to our streets. The gates of this holy city were named
+after the twelve tribes of the children of Israel, which embraced all
+God's ancient covenant people, and which denotes the perfection and
+completeness of our heavenly home as including all the spiritual Israel.
+
+"And the wall of the city had twelve foundations, and in them the names
+of the twelve apostles of the Lamb." The twelve foundations, or rather
+the twelve courses of stone in the foundation, are more fully described
+hereafter. The names of the twelve tribes were on the gates to denote
+that the city was composed of God's true and complete Israel, and the
+names of the twelve apostles are on the foundation to denote that this
+contains the church which was "built upon the foundation of the apostles
+and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief cornerstone." Eph.
+2:20. The system of truth that they preached to the world forms the
+doctrinal basis of the church of God, they having received it from
+heaven "by inspiration of God," and their names all appear; and together
+they constitute one harmonious, solid foundation upon which the church
+shall stand forever.
+
+The dimensions of the city as measured by the angel are next given as
+twelve thousand furlongs, or one thousand five hundred miles. By the
+statement that the length, the breadth and the height are equal, some
+have supposed that the city was one thousand five hundred miles high. To
+quote the words of a certain commentator: "The language, however, will
+bear another meaning, which is far more natural. It is not that the
+length and breadth and height were severally equal to _each other_, but
+_equal with themselves_; that is the length was everywhere the same, the
+breadth everywhere the same, and the height the same. It was perfect and
+symmetrical in all its proportions. This is confirmed by the fact
+distinctly stated, that the wall was one hundred and forty and four
+cubits high, or two hundred and sixteen feet, a proper height for a
+wall; while it is said only that 'the length is as large as the
+breadth.'" This writer reckoned but eighteen inches for a cubit, whereas
+some figure twenty-two. A city one thousand and five hundred miles high
+with a wall only two hundred and sixteen or two hundred and sixty four
+feet high, would be altogether out of proportion.
+
+The wondrous dimensions of this city set forth the fact that our future
+home far exceeds in grandeur and extent everything that is looked upon
+as glorious upon earth. Who ever heard of a city one thousand and five
+hundred miles square? We have had empires so large, but no such cities.
+In this representation the city does not encompass the entire earth as
+she in one sense really does, because it would be impossible thus to
+represent her and at the same time she be represented as a city within
+the earth, into which the nations bring their "glory and honor." The
+ancient city of Babylon with its beautiful hanging-gardens, the very
+triumph of human skill, and the city itself lying in a foursquare, being
+fifteen miles on each side, was unsurpassed in human loveliness. But the
+city of God is represented as _fifteen hundred_ miles square, which
+dimensions are out of all proportion with anything existing on earth;
+hence its beauty and magnificence must be ascribed to God only.
+
+"And the building of the wall of it was of jasper: and the city was pure
+gold like unto clear glass." The jasper is the same crystal gem before
+mentioned. What a wondrous wall it must have been! It was not made of
+such common material as granite, freestone, or marble, which can make
+the most imposing structures that human pride can rear, and which are
+fit for the residence of lofty kings; but it was of jasper, clear as
+crystal. Think of the wall of this holy city being nearly three hundred
+feet high and stretching around the city six thousand miles, all built
+of the purest diamond! No stretch of the human imagination can properly
+compass such a vision. In rearing earthly structures men seek such
+material as combine durability, cheapness, beauty, and ease of being
+wrought. Look at this wall! For _durability_, it has the most
+indestructible material that can be found on earth. For _beauty_, the
+language of man can not even convey a meagre description of its amazing
+loveliness. For _cheapness_--God's riches were inexhaustible, hence it
+was not necessary to take this into consideration. For _ease of being
+wrought_--think of the vast amount of labor it requires to cut and shape
+even one large diamond, it being said to require in some cases years of
+incessant toil; yet God could afford to build the wall of this city of
+such material. Oh, wonders of God's handiwork! How inexpressibly
+glorious! This, my dear reader, symbolizes the priceless worth of our
+eternal home, secured through the atonement. Study the plan of
+redemption. There is nothing equal to it in the universe. "What is a man
+profited, if he gain the whole world, and _lose his own soul_?"
+
+Men become greatly agitated over the announcement of the discovery of
+gold in the Klondyke, in the Australian continent, in California, and
+with feverish excitement they abandon their homes and rush headlong to
+the reputed El Dorado, fearing neither famine, storms, deserts, nor the
+icy northern blasts. But all the gold ever mined from the bowels of the
+earth is insignificant and forms no comparison with the representation
+of this city. Its streets and mansions were built, not of common cement,
+lumber, nor even granite and marble, but _of pure gold_.
+
+The twelve courses of stone in the foundation of the wall have already
+been mentioned. It is here particularly described. One might suppose
+that, according to human custom, rougher material would be selected for
+the foundation. Not so, however. The most brilliant and costly gems were
+chosen to lay these courses. Nothing cheap nor common had anything to do
+in the construction of this marvelous city. It was altogether beyond the
+reach of men to imitate: it was God's own handiwork; and we can not but
+admire its wondrous beauty. It is unnecessary to give a minute
+description of the gems of which these foundation-courses were composed.
+They were the most beautiful and costly of which men possess any
+knowledge. In appearance they represent various colors of the most
+delicate shades. Royal persons wear even the smallest of these gems upon
+their persons and imagine themselves richly adorned; but in this city of
+God they appear in such abundance that they are even selected to form
+the basis, or foundation, of the wall. "And the twelve gates were twelve
+pearls; every several gate was of one pearl." We have rich necklaces of
+pearl; but where is the individual that was ever blessed with such a
+profusion of wealth that he could ornament the gates of a city with
+pearls? The gates of the New Jerusalem, however, were not merely
+ornamented or studded with pearls--that were a very small thing for
+her--but each gate was of one solid pearl. To conceive the immensity of
+this representation we must consider the size of the gates required to
+accommodate the multitudes constantly entering and departing from a
+city. To be in proportion to the wall they would have to be of immense
+size, and also of prodigious strength in order to resist the assaults of
+enemies, as they would be the first places attacked. The gate of the
+temple called Beautiful, mentioned in the Book of Acts, which was in the
+wall surrounding the temple, is said to have been seventy-five feet high
+and sixty in width, built of Corinthian brass. Yet immense as they were,
+those in the New Jerusalem were each of one solid pearl. Oh, beautiful
+city of God, the home of the saints!
+
+The most prominent object within the walls of the ancient Jerusalem was
+the magnificent temple on Mount Zion. It was the chief ornament and
+glory of the city. In the New Jerusalem, however, no temple is seen.
+Alas! is not this a great defect? What is Jerusalem without a temple
+where the tribes may go up and worship before the Lord? Oh, they need no
+temple in this glorious city of God; for there is one there greater than
+the temple: "the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple of it."
+This doubtless sets forth the fact that the worship of God is pure and
+spiritual and of free access to all. Under the old dispensation the high
+priest alone, and he but once a year, was permitted to enter the sacred
+precincts of the Deity as limited to the inner sanctuary of the temple.
+Now God's people need no mediating priest to offer up a special
+sacrifice that the will of God might be known; but all are kings and
+priests who offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus
+Christ (1 Pet. 2:5); yea, as saith the prophet, "they _shall all know
+me_ from the least of them unto the greatest of them, saith the Lord."
+Jer. 31:34. No temple is needed that the Shekinah of the divine presence
+may take up its abode between the cherubim in the most holy place, but
+"the glory of the Lord" fills the entire city. It can not be confined to
+a given locality. "The Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple of
+it," and they constitute the glory of the New Jerusalem as did the
+temple on Mount Zion that of the old.
+
+"The nations of them which are saved shall walk in the light of it." Can
+any one conceive the grandeur and the sublimity of the scene when a
+light that eclipses the sun and the moon is reflected from streets and
+mansions of gold, or comes streaming through a wall composed of the most
+brilliant gems of different hues, with gates of solid pearl? No wonder,
+then, that the poet has denominated it "the beautiful light of God"! The
+gates are open continuously, for they are not closed by day, and "there
+shall be no night there." But "there shall in no wise enter into it
+anything that defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination, or
+maketh a lie: but they which are written in the Lamb's book of Life."
+This, my dear reader, is the reward of the New Testament church, "the
+church of God."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+
+ And he showed me a pure river of water of life, dear as crystal,
+ proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb.
+
+ 2. In the midst of the street of it, and on either side of the
+ river, was there the tree of life, which bare twelve manner of
+ fruits, and yielded her fruit every month: and the leaves of the
+ tree were for the healing of the nations.
+
+ 3. And there shall be no more curse: but the throne of God and
+ of the Lamb shall be in it; and his servants shall serve him:
+
+ 4. And they shall see his face; and his name shall be in their
+ foreheads.
+
+ 5. And there shall be no night there; and they need no candle,
+ neither light of the sun; for the Lord God giveth them light:
+ and they shall reign for ever and ever.
+
+The description of the New Jerusalem continues in the first five verses
+of this chapter. By the "river of the water of life" is doubtless meant
+full salvation, which as a mighty flowing stream issues "out of the
+throne of God and of the Lamb." To this fountain of living waters an
+invitation is now given to all to come and partake to their
+satisfaction. "The Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that
+heareth say, Come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life
+freely." Verse 17. As a defense to God's people in this world salvation
+is represented as a great wall surrounding them (Isa. 26:12); but as a
+source of joy, holiness and happiness, it is a living stream whereof all
+may partake. While this symbol meets an appropriate fulfilment in the
+present dispensation, yet salvation will also be the eternal possession
+of the saints in the world to come, when "they shall hunger no more,
+neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun light on them, nor any
+heat. For the Lamb, which is in the midst thereof, shall feed them, and
+shall _lead them unto living fountains of waters_; and God shall wipe
+away all tears from their eyes." Chap. 7:16, 17.
+
+In a most appropriate place, upon the banks of the river, grew "the tree
+of life, which bare twelve manner of fruits, and yielded her fruit every
+month: and the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations."
+The tree of life in the garden of Eden was a symbol of man's immortality
+or incorruption, or rather the _means_ of it; for after his fall it was
+securely guarded and he driven from the garden, "lest he put forth his
+hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever"
+(Gen. 3:22) and thus frustrate the decree of God just uttered--that he
+should return unto dust and corruption. In the New Jerusalem, however,
+that tree of life blooms again and bears fruit abundantly, yea
+continuously, as symbolized by "every month," and no cherubim with
+flaming sword are placed to guard all approach to it. The privilege is
+open; for it is added immediately, "There _shall be no more curse_."
+This, then, symbolizes the removal of spiritual death and the
+impartation of everlasting life in this world and immortality in the
+next. The tree of life grew on both sides of the river. On this side of
+the line of mortality we have access to it in one important sense, while
+those in the future world are preserved also by its healing benefits.
+
+The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit abide in this city. God reveals
+himself, not to a few chosen priests only through the Shekinah of his
+presence, but to all his servants--"they all see his face." As in the
+ancient tabernacle he manifested himself by "the glory of the Lord," or
+the Shekinah, which was represented as "seeing his face"; so, also, the
+"glory of the Lord" abides in the New Jerusalem, filling the entire city
+with the holy manifestation of the divine presence. His people are
+"sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise," by which they possess the
+name of their Father--not the name of the beast nor of his image, but
+_the name of the Father_.
+
+"And there shall be no night there; and they need no candle, neither
+light of the sun; for the Lord God giveth them light: and they shall
+reign forever and ever." This city has no need of natural or artificial
+light, "for the Lamb is the light thereof." Chap. 21:23. The light of
+the sun stands connected with the light of a candle and both are
+represented as unnecessary, which denotes that "there shall be no night
+there," but one clear eternal day.
+
+ 6. And he said unto me, These sayings are faithful and true: and
+ the Lord God of the holy prophets sent his angel to show unto
+ his servants the things which must shortly be done.
+
+ 7. Behold, I come quickly: blessed is he that keepeth the
+ sayings of the prophecy of this book.
+
+The language of symbols is discontinued. With the description of the New
+Jerusalem closes the grand panoramic scene of this book. Wondrous indeed
+have been the events of earth prophetically outlined, but we have the
+assurance that "these things are faithful and true." A continuous
+political and ecclesiastical history of that portion of the earth made
+the subject of Apocalyptic vision, from the dawn of Christianity until
+the last day, was here written down in advance. After the permanent
+division of the empire, which occurred under Valens and Valentinian[16]
+in A.D. 364, it was necessary that the political and the ecclesiastical
+history of the empire should be divided in the prophecy. This
+inspiration has done. The downfall of the Western empire is clearly
+predicted in the symbols under the first four trumpets; but the eclipse
+is afterwards lifted, and the same Western empire again appears in
+Imperial form under the control of the Papacy. After giving their power
+and strength unto the beast during the Dark Ages, the horns afterward
+turn against the Papacy and rob her of all her temporal authority and
+power, thus pointing us clearly to the history of modern Europe, in
+which the prophecy has been actually fulfilled. They themselves end at
+the judgment of the last day. Thus, the political history of the Western
+empire is carried through to the end. The Eastern division of the empire
+is also made a subject of prophecy, and its overthrow is described under
+the sixth trumpet. This was effected by the second woe, or the rise of
+the Ottoman power, and that woe is represented as continuing until after
+the death and the resurrection of the two witnesses and terminating
+shortly before the end of time. Therefore the political history of the
+Eastern empire, which has been under the power of the Turks for
+centuries, is outlined until the end. The ecclesiastical history of the
+Eastern empire is also given, its most prominent feature being the rise
+and the development of that pest of Mohammedanism, which rests like a
+dark cloud over that fair country until this day. In the Western
+division the rise of the Papacy, its continuation, the rise of
+Protestantism and its duration, are all clearly outlined, reaching down
+to these last days. Then the scene is suddenly enlarged and is carried
+beyond the limits of the earth--the Apocalyptic earth--into "the whole
+world," when the powers of wickedness are combined in spirit to
+antagonize the reformation of holiness and truth which God is using to
+gather his faithful ones together in preparation for the coming of the
+Son of God to judgment. In view of these wonderful events of the last
+days, how comforting the words of the text before us--"Behold, _I come
+quickly:_ blessed is he that keepeth the sayings of the prophecy of this
+book"!
+
+[Footnote 16: Some historians give A.D. 395 as the date of the permanent
+division of the empire. The government of the Eastern and Western
+divisions was separate from the accession of Valens and Valentinian, in
+364, until during the reign of Theodosius the Great, when the West,
+through the jealous rivalries of different competitors for the throne,
+had fallen into great disorder. Theodosius twice interposed to right
+matters and finally took the government into his own hands for the space
+of four months, in 395, when he died, after arranging for the division
+of the empire between his two sons Arcadius and Honorius.]
+
+ 8. And I John saw these things, and heard them. And when I had
+ heard and seen, I fell down to worship before the feet of the
+ angel which showed me these things.
+
+ 9. Then saith he unto me, See thou do it not: for I am thy
+ fellowservant, and of thy brethren the prophets, and of them
+ which keep the sayings of this book: worship God.
+
+The mind of the apostle was so enraptured with the visions he beheld
+that he could not but adore and worship; but the angel that had been the
+chosen instrument to reveal these prophecies refused his act of homage
+and instructed him to "worship God." Created intelligences are not
+worthy of such respect; to God alone all honor and praise belongs. Jesus
+Christ our Redeemer is God--God over all, blessed forever. As such he is
+worthy of the homage supreme of all our hearts, the praises of all our
+lips.
+
+ 10. And he saith unto me, Seal not the sayings of the prophecy
+ of this book: for the time is at hand.
+
+ 11. He that is unjust, let him be unjust still: and he which is
+ filthy, let him be filthy still: and he that is righteous, let
+ him be righteous still: and he that is holy, let him be holy
+ still.
+
+ 12. And, behold, I come quickly; and my reward is with me, to
+ give every man according as his work shall be.
+
+ 13. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first
+ and the last.
+
+ 14. Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may
+ have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the
+ gates into the city.
+
+ 15. For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers, and
+ murderers, and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie.
+
+The popular opinion is that this book of the Revelation is sealed; but
+John received the direct command, "_Seal not_ the sayings of the
+prophecy of this book." The majority of the teachers of Babylon to-day
+are fulfilling Isaiah 29:9-11, and that is the reason why it has become
+to them a sealed book. God makes known the blessed truths of the
+prophecies of this book to his own beloved children, who walk before him
+in sincerity and truth. A blessing is pronounced upon us if we keep
+them. His coming is near at hand, and his reward is with him to render
+unto every man according as his work shall be. No offers of salvation
+will be extended when Christ appears to give us access to the tree of
+immortal life and an abundant entrance into the eternal city beyond; but
+it will then be said, "He that is unjust, _let him be_ unjust still: and
+he which is filthy, let him be filthy still: and he that is righteous,
+let him be righteous still: and he that is holy, let him be holy still."
+"Dogs" are left without. This term as applied to a person is one of
+great reproach. It is so among us, and much more so among the Jews, by
+whom that animal was regarded as unclean. It signifies evil workers.
+Evil characters of every class will have no part in the heavenly realm,
+but will be cast into the lake of fire. It will be the perfection of
+misery to be banished forever from the presence of God and the
+companionship of all that is good and holy. "Blessed are they that do
+his commandments, that they may have right to the tree of Life, and may
+enter in through the gates into the city."
+
+ 16. I Jesus have sent mine angel to testify unto you these
+ things in the churches. I am the root and the offspring of
+ David, and the bright and morning star.
+
+ 17. And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that
+ heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And
+ whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely.
+
+The statements of these verses have been considered heretofore, hence
+there is no necessity of further comment on them in this connection.
+
+ 18. For I testify unto every man that heareth the words of the
+ prophecy of this book, If any man shall add unto these things,
+ God shall add unto him the plagues that are written in this
+ book:
+
+ 19. And if any man shall take away from the words of the book of
+ this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the book of
+ life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are
+ written in this book.
+
+Here is the most solemn warning against any one who should presume to
+corrupt the prophecies of the Revelation by adding to or taking away
+from them. Nor was such a warning needless. This book contains the long
+history of God's church, and also the history of all her persecutors,
+painted in colors of deepest infamy, and the final doom that awaits
+them. These enemies were to ride in triumph over the earth during a long
+career of centuries, when the children of God should be trodden down
+beneath their feet, as it were, while they boasted themselves as being
+the true church, the anointed of heaven. These Revelations were to be
+handed down to succeeding generations through these very persecutors.
+The great whore of Babylon had her likeness taken and then committed to
+her for preservation. Would she not falsify them? Nearly all the early
+records of the church have been corrupted by the church of Rome. For
+ages it has been a doctrine of that institution that pious fraud was
+consistent and even commendable when practised to further the influence
+of that church. Yea, she has proclaimed openly and unblushingly that if
+her cause could be promoted by deception and lies they were perfectly
+justifiable; and her practise has been consistent with her teachings. In
+view of the fact that God's Word was to pass through the depths of this
+"mystery of iniquity," it is not surprising that we find annexed to this
+concluding portion of Holy Writ the awful anathema: "If any man shall
+add unto these things, God shall add unto him the plagues that are
+written in this book: and if any man shall take away from the words of
+the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the book
+of life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are written
+in this book."
+
+ 20. He which testifieth these things saith, Surely I come
+ quickly. Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus.
+
+ 21. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen.
+
+What importance is attached to the second coming of Christ! Over and
+over again it is stated distinctly. It is the grand climax unto which
+all the series of events in this book leads.
+
+ "Are you ready, waiting for the Lord?
+ See, the signs proclaim him near;
+ In the awful thunders of his Word,
+ Now his coming steps we hear.
+
+ "Now are many running to and fro,
+ Spreading holiness around;
+ And the evening light begins to glow,
+ Soon we'll hear the trumpet's sound.
+
+ "Hark! the solemn warning unto all,
+ Judgment's coming, oh, how soon!
+ Flee, O man, at Mercy's final call,
+ Heaven trembles at your doom.
+
+ "Christ is coming, oh, the heavenly sight!
+ Our Beloved can't delay,
+ For his bride is robed in snowy white,
+ Ready for the marriage-day."
+
+Amen. "Even so come, Lord Jesus." Then will appear the great "Alpha and
+Omega, the beginning and the ending." In the beginning he "created the
+heaven and the earth." In the end, John said, "I saw a new heaven and a
+new earth: for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away;
+and there was no more sea." In the beginning Satan entered the domain of
+God's people to deceive and destroy. In the end he is cast out, and will
+deceive the nations no more. In the beginning sickness, pain, sorrow,
+and wretchedness found entrance to the world. In the end "God shall wipe
+away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more sorrow, nor
+crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are
+passed away." In the beginning the people of earth were placed under the
+iron hand of death, who has claimed his teeming millions. In the end, "I
+saw the dead, small and great, stand before God.... And the sea gave up
+the dead which were in it; and death and hell delivered up the dead
+which were in them ... and death and hell were cast into the lake of
+fire." In the beginning was a blooming garden containing the tree of
+immortal life. In the end we find the tree of life again "in the midst
+of the Paradise of God." In the beginning a curse was placed upon this
+earth. In the world to come "there shall be no more curse: but the
+throne of God and of the Lamb shall be in it." In the beginning the
+first Adam lost his universal dominion over the earth. In the end we
+find Jesus Christ, the second Adam, crowned King of kings and Lord of
+lords, and reigning in triumph and glory forever. In the beginning man
+was barred from the tree of life and driven from the garden of Eden. In
+the end, "Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have
+right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the
+city."
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+A
+
+Aachen, 326.
+Abaddon, 162.
+Abubekr, first caliph, 155.
+Aegean Sea, 36, 46.
+Africa, conquered by Saracens, 160.
+Ahab, 53.
+Alani, 145.
+Alans, 146, 215.
+Alaric, invades Italy, 136-141, 149.
+Ala-Shehr, 63.
+Albi, council of, 339.
+Albigenses, 113, 161, 196, 270, 342.
+Aleppo, 165.
+Alexander I., 172.
+Alexander the Great, 320.
+Alexander VI., Pope, 346, 347.
+Alexandria, 109, 110.
+Alison, A., quoted, 307-315.
+Ammianus Marcellinus, quoted, 188.
+Amiens, 140.
+Ammon, 330.
+Anabaptists, 292.
+Anglo-Saxons, 215.
+Anthony, founder of monasticism, 189, 190.
+Antioch, 104, 109, 110.
+Antioch Epiphanes, 230.
+Antipas, 49.
+Apollo, 241.
+Apollyon, 162.
+Aquinas, Thos., 340, 341.
+Arabia, 330; conquered by Saracens, 160.
+Arras, 140.
+Arcadius, Roman emp., 137, 138, 440, n.
+Argos, 137.
+Armageddon, 332.
+Armenia, 330; conquered by Turks, 165.
+Arnout, Mme., quoted, 310.
+Asbury, Bishop, 368.
+Assyria, 330.
+Astolphus, k. of Lombards, 352, n.
+Athanasius, 190.
+Athens, 137.
+Attalus, 139.
+Atkins, Robert, quoted, 365.
+Attica, 137.
+Attila, 142, 145, 146, 149.
+Atys, 407.
+Augsburg, 191.
+Augsburg Confession (A.D. 1530), 191, 247, 252, 253.
+Augustine, 96.
+Augustines, Order of, 246, 251.
+Augustulus, Roman emp., 148.
+Augustus Cæsar, first Roman emp., 222.
+Aurelian, Roman emp., 189.
+Aurelius, Marcus, Roman emp., 46, 98.
+Austerlitz, battle of, 322.
+Avignon, 327; removal of Papal chair to, 305, 306;
+ council of, 339.
+
+
+B
+
+Babylon, taken by Cyrus, 166, 329, 331;
+ great edifices of, 432.
+Babylonian empire, 330, 397.
+Bacchus, 407.
+Bagdad, founded (A.D. 762), 160, 165.
+Balaam, 49, 50.
+Balak, 50.
+Barak, 332.
+Barnes, Dr., quoted, 359.
+Baronius, quoted, 345.
+Barrows, John Henry, quoted, 409, 410.
+Basil, council of, 340.
+Bayazid, Sultan, 61.
+Bedford jail, 36
+Beethoven, 88.
+Behiston rock, noted inscription on, 18, n.
+Belisarius, general of Justinian, 148, 236, 351, n.
+Bellarmine, Cardinal, quoted, 341, 342.
+Benedict IX., Pope, 345, 346.
+Bernard, 197; quoted, 199.
+Beziers, council of, 339.
+Boetia, 137.
+Bohemia, 244, 339.
+Bologna, 327.
+Bonaparte, Jerome, 321.
+Bonaparte, Louis, 321.
+Bonaparte, Joseph, 321.
+Bonaparte, Napoleon, 172, 317, 320-325, 327.
+Boniface IV., Pope, 240.
+Bonney, Chas. Carroll, quoted, 408, 409.
+Borgia, Roderick, 346, 347.
+Bosphorus, 171.
+Bouchard, M., 18, n.
+Buddha, 409.
+Bunyan, John, his imprisonment, 36, n., 293.
+Burgundians, 215.
+Burgundy, 215.
+Burke, quoted, 303.
+Butler, quoted, 222, 223, 224, 230, 231.
+
+
+C
+
+Cadiz, 324.
+Cæsar, 320.
+Cæsar Augustus, Roman emp., 222.
+Calcedon, council of, 110.
+Calvin, John, reformer, 252
+Calvinists, 252, 291.
+Campbell, Alexander, quoted, 359, 360.
+Canoosa, 111.
+Canterbury, See of, 112, n.
+Carlovingian dynasty, 325, 326, 350-352.
+Carrier, 310, 311.
+Cassini, quoted, 200.
+Cathari, 196.
+Catherine de Medici, 118.
+Catherine the Great of Russia, 172.
+Chaldea, 330.
+Chalons, 146.
+Charlemagne, 236, 305, 320, 325;
+ restores the Western empire, 325, 326, 350-352;
+ patriciate of, 350, 351, also n.
+Charles Martel, 161, 325.
+Charles V., k. of France, 307.
+Charles IX., k. of France, 118.
+Chase, Chas. Wingate, quoted, 405.
+Chaumette, 308, 309.
+Christians,
+ persecutions of, 97, 295;
+ by the Roman emperors (ten seasons of), 98, 116, 230, 231;
+ by the Papacy, 113, 116-118, 196-200, 243, 295, 338-344;
+ by Protestants, 252, 291-294.
+Christian Science, 410, 411.
+Chrysostom, 96.
+Cicero, 222.
+Claudius, quoted, 199.
+Clement of Rome, 95.
+Cologne (wrongly spelled Colonge in text), 197.
+Constance, council of, 244, 245, 339, 345.
+Constantine the Great, 189, 231, 241.
+Constantinople, 158;
+ captured by the Turks (A.D. 1453), 169;
+ council of, 109, 344.
+Constitutionalists, 314.
+Consular power, 214, also n., 351.
+Copenhagen, 324.
+Corinth, 137.
+Council, first of church, 231.
+Councils, general, of church, 109, 231, 321, 339, 340, 345, 346.
+Covenanters, Scotch, 293, 294.
+Creasy, quoted, 324.
+Crellius, 292.
+Croesus, k. of Lydia, 56.
+Crusades, 166.
+Cyprian, 107.
+Cyrus the Great, his capture of Babylon, 166, 329, 331.
+
+
+D
+
+Dacia, 137.
+D'Alembert, 297-303.
+Dalmatia, 136.
+Damascus, 165.
+Daniel, prophecies of, 235-238.
+Danton, 310.
+Dantonists, 315.
+Darwin, 411.
+D'Aubigne, quoted, 96, 185, 191, 192, 195, 208, 209, 244, 245, 247, 253,
+ 276, 277.
+Decemvirate, 214, also n., 351.
+Decius, Roman emp., 98.
+Decretals of Isodore, 344.
+Demetrius, 43.
+Demetrius Cantemir, quoted, 170.
+Diana, 241;
+ temple of at Ephesus, 42, 64.
+Diderot, 297-808.
+Dictator, office of, at Rome, 214, n.
+Diocletian, Roman emp., 48, 98, 230.
+Dionysis, 407.
+Diotrephes, 102, 103.
+Donatists, 342.
+Domitian, Roman emp., 36, 98.
+Domnus, 189.
+Dow, Lorenzo, quoted, 278, 360.
+Dowling, quoted, 187, 188, 189, 190, 196, 241, 243.
+Duke of Alva, 118.
+Du Guesclin, 307.
+Dupin, quoted, 344.
+Dwight, Pres., quoted, 303.
+
+
+E
+
+Easter, 105.
+Eastern Empire, See _Roman Empire_.
+Eastern Question, 172, 173.
+Edgar, quoted, 340.
+Edict of Nantes, 118, 295.
+Egbert, quoted, 196, 197.
+Egypt, conquered by Saracens, 160.
+Elba, Island of, 323, 324.
+Ephesus, fate of, 45, 64, 68; temple at, 42.
+Eudoxia, 143.
+Euphrates, 164, 166; turned by Cyrus, 166, 329, 331.
+Eusebius, quoted, 188, 189.
+Evervinus, quoted. 197-199.
+
+
+F
+
+Farrara, 327.
+Feldkirchen, 247.
+Fisher, Geo., quoted, 103, 189.
+Fletcher, John, quoted, 277.
+Formosus, Pope, 345.
+Foster, Bishop R.S., quoted, 368-370.
+France, invaded by Saracens, 161.
+Francis I., of France, 307.
+Franks, 146, 215.
+Frederick of Saxony, quoted, 247-249.
+Frederick II., k. of Prussia, 297.
+French Revolution, 305-315, 324, 352.
+Freron, quoted, 313, 314.
+Friedland, battle of, 322.
+Fuller, quoted, 340.
+
+
+G
+
+Gallienus, Roman emp., 187
+Gallus, Roman emp., 98.
+Gascoigne, 215.
+Gates, Theophilus R., quoted, 278-283.
+Geneva, 252.
+Genseric, k. of Vandals, 25, 142, 143, 149.
+Germania, 139.
+Gepidæ, 145.
+Gibbon, quoted, 64, 136-138, 142, 143, 145, 158, 351.
+Gibbons, Cardinal, quoted 343, 344.
+Gieseler, quoted, 103.
+Girondists, 315.
+Gnostics, 410.
+Gobet, 308.
+Goddess of Reason, 209, 401.
+Goths, 136, 141.
+Greek Empire (Eastern Empire), See _Roman Empire_.
+Green, B.A., quoted, 412, 413.
+Gregory VII., Pope, 111, 184, 242.
+
+
+H
+
+Haeckel, 411.
+Hamlet, 307.
+Handel, 88.
+Hartley, quoted, 361.
+Heads, seven, of dragon and Papal beasts,
+ signifying seven forms of government,
+ 214, also n., 235, 349, 350.
+Hebert, 308, 309.
+Henry VIII., k. of England, 292.
+Henry IV., k. of France, 307.
+Henry IV., emperor of Holy Roman empire, 111.
+Henry, k. of Navarre, 118.
+Hera, 154.
+Hermus, 56.
+Herod Agrippa, 240.
+Herodotus, 166, 329.
+Heruli, 145, 148, 215, 236.
+Hieroglyphics, 18, 19, n.
+Hilarion, 189.
+Hildebrand, See _Gregory VII_.
+Hilton, John, quoted, 246, 247.
+Hiram Abiff, 407.
+Holbach, Baron, 300.
+Holland, 321.
+Holy Roman Empire, 325, 326, 351;
+ dissolved (A.D. 1806), 327.
+Honorius, Roman emp., 136, 138, 139, 440, n.
+Honorius, Pope, 344, 346.
+Hopkins, quoted, 362.
+Horn, the little, of Daniel 7,
+ a symbol of the Papacy, 235-238, 350, 357.
+Horn, of the goat, symbol of Alexander, 20.
+Horns, ten, of the Dragon and Papal beast,
+ signifying ten kingdoms, 14, 215, 235, 236, 349.
+Horns, three, plucked up before the little horn,
+ 236, 350, 351.
+Horns, four, of the goat,
+ symbolizing four divisions of Alexander's empire, 20.
+Hugenots, 118.
+Hugenot wars, 252.
+Hungary, 169, 215.
+Huns, 141, 145, 146, 215.
+Huntington, Lady, 369.
+Huss, John, 62, 244, 245, 249, 339.
+
+
+I
+
+Iconium, 165.
+Ignatius, his epistles, extracts from, 104.
+Illuminati, 297-303, 404.
+Illyricum, 137.
+Indulgences, 250, 251.
+Imperial power, 214, also n.
+Innocent III., Pope, 111, n., 339.
+Innocent XI., Pope, 118.
+Institorus, Henry, quoted, 246.
+Interdicts, 111, also n., 112, also n.
+Ionia, 64.
+Isodore, false Decretals of, 344, 345.
+Islam, See _Mohammedanism_.
+
+
+J
+
+Jena, battle of, 322.
+Jerome, 36, 96.
+Jerome of Prague, 62, 339.
+Jerusalem, captured by Saracens, 110.
+Jezebel, 53.
+John XI., Pope, 345.
+John, k. of England,
+ his quarrel with Innocent III., 112, n.
+Johnson, B.W., quoted, 357-359.
+Judson, quoted, 171, 172, 321.
+Jupiter, 241.
+Justinian, Roman emp., 148, 351, n.
+
+
+K
+
+Kinkade, Wm., quoted, 359.
+Klondyke, 433.
+Koran, 158, 406.
+Kurtz, quoted, 95, 96.
+
+
+L
+
+Laodicea, fate of, 64, 67, 68.
+Lateran, councils of, 329, 339, 340.
+Lavaur, council of, 339.
+Leo III., Pope, 325.
+Leo X., Pope, 250.
+Lepelletier, 308.
+Liszt, 88.
+Lombards, 196.
+Lombards (barbarians), 215, 236, 350.
+Lombardy, 351.
+Lord, Mr., quoted, 100.
+Louis XII., k. of France, 307.
+Louis, XIV., k. of France, 118, 295, 307.
+Lucretia, 347.
+Luther, Martin, reformer,
+ 62, 244, 246, 247, 249, 251,
+ 252, 342; quoted, 361.
+Lutherans, 252, 291.
+Lydia, 56, 64.
+
+
+M
+
+Machiard, 215.
+Mackey, quoted, 405.
+Mackintosh, Sir James, quoted, 323, 324.
+Mæcenas, 222.
+Mæsia, 215.
+Mahomet, See _Mohammed_.
+Manes, 298.
+Manicheans, 342.
+Mantz, Felix, 292.
+Marat, 308, 310, 311.
+Marathon, battle of, 191.
+Marcellus, Pope, 341.
+Marcus Aurelius, Roman emp., 46, 98.
+Marengo, battle of, 191, 322.
+Marie Antoinette, q. of France, her execution, 306.
+Marozia, 345.
+Marsh, quoted, 186.
+Martin, Pope, 339.
+Mary Tudor, 117.
+Maximus, Roman emp., 98, 143.
+Mecca, 154.
+Megara, 137.
+Megiddo, 332.
+Melanchthon, Philip, 247.
+Mentz, 140.
+Mesopotamia, 330.
+Metropolitan, office of, 105, 106.
+Military Tribunes, 214, also n.
+Milman, quoted, 95.
+Milner, Joseph, quoted, 190, 191.
+Mithras, 407.
+Moab, 330.
+Mohammed, 61, 154-162, 389.
+Mohammedanism, 25, 61, 134, 154-173, 331, 341.
+Moldavia, prince of, 170.
+Momoro, 309.
+Momyllus Augustulus, Roman emp., 148.
+Montanism, 105.
+Monasticism, rise of, 189, 190.
+Montesquieu, 300.
+Morea, 170.
+Moscow, 322, 324.
+Mosheim, quoted, 94, 105, 106, 109.
+Mozart, 87.
+Murat, 321.
+Myers, quoted, 293.
+Mysia, 49.
+Mythra, mysteries of, 298.
+
+
+N
+
+Nantes, 310; edict of, 118, 295.
+Naples, 324.
+Napoleon, See _Bonaparte_.
+Narbonne, council of, 339.
+National Convention of France, 307, 317.
+Nero, Roman emp., 98, 311.
+Nerva, Roman emp., 36.
+Ney, Marshal, 322.
+Niagara Falls, 87.
+Nicaea, council of, 109, 231.
+Nicolaitans, 44, 49, 50.
+Nicholas, 172.
+Nicolas, 44.
+Notre Dame, 309.
+
+
+O
+
+Odoacer, 148, 236.
+Oppede, 117.
+Oriental Philosophy, 410.
+Origen, 107.
+Osiris, 407.
+Ostrogoths, 141, 145, 148, 215, 236, 351, n.
+Othman, See _Ottoman_.
+Otto the Great, 326
+Ottoman, 61, 169.
+Ottoman empire, 64, 165, 173, 441.
+Oxford, council of, 339.
+
+
+P
+
+Pactolus, 56.
+Pache, 308.
+Paderewski, 88.
+Paganism, 97, 214-232, 331, 388-390.
+Palestine, conquered by Saracens, 160;
+ invaded by Crusaders, 166.
+Pannonia, 215.
+Papacy, first steps to apostasy,
+ 102, 184, 185; growth of its power,
+ 103-107, 108, 110, 111, 184, 236-243, 352, n.;
+ Pope styled Universal Bishop, 110, 184;
+ blasphemous titles of, 242, 243, 264, 337;
+ its war against the saints, See _Christians,
+ persecutions of;_ at its height, 111,
+ also n., 184, 236, 305, 326, 236-243;
+ temporal power of, 184, 236, 305, 326, 336, 352, n.;
+ removal of Papal chair to Avignon, 305, 306;
+ spiritual supremacy lost at the Reformation,
+ 191, 249-251;
+ revolt of the temporal princes, 255, 355;
+ end of its temporal power, 255, 327, 328;
+ decree of Papal infallibility, 243, 346.
+Papal States, See _Papacy, temporal power of._
+Patmos, 36.
+Patriarch, office of, 109, 110.
+Patriciate, 350, 351, also n.
+Paul of Antioch, 188, 189.
+Paulus, 344.
+Pavia, battle of, 191.
+Pepin, Carlovingian king, 236, 305, 326, 350.
+Pergamus, fate of, 64, 68.
+Persecutions, See _Christians, persecutions of._
+Persia, conquered by Saracens, 160.
+Petrus Lombardus, 96.
+Peucer, 292.
+Philadelphia, remarkable preservation of, 61-64, 68.
+Philip Augustus, 111.
+Philosophists, 297-303.
+Phocas, Roman emp. 184.
+Phocis, 137.
+Pius IV., Pope, 327.
+Platina, 345.
+Pliny, 222, 226.
+Poland, 169.
+Polycarp, 46.
+Pontifex Maxima, 222, 239.
+Poor Men of Lyons, 198.
+Popes, power of, See _Papacy_.
+Portugal overrun by Saracens, 160.
+Prague, 244.
+Proles, Andrew, quoted, 246.
+Protestantism, rise of, 191, 252, 254;
+ its false miracles, 259-261;
+ its persecutions, See _Christians,
+ persecutions of._
+Proetextatus, 188.
+Puritans, 293.
+
+
+R
+
+Ravenna, 148, 351, 352, n.;
+ exarchate of, 351, n.
+Reformation, the, 249-252;
+ predictions of by medieval Christians, 243-249.
+Regal power, 214, also n.
+Reign of Terror in France, 306-315.
+Revival of Learning, 249.
+Rheims, 140.
+Roberts, Bishop, quoted, 364.
+Robespierre, 307, 309, 313.
+Rodgers, Hester Ann, 368.
+Romagna, 327.
+Roman Empire, forms of, See _Heads, seven_, and _Horns, ten_;
+ Christianity the State religion under Constantine, 116, 231;
+ division of under Valens and Valentinian, 440;
+ overrun by barbarians, 25, 125, 136-141, 142, 143, 145, 146, 148;
+ fall of Western division (A.D. 476), 133, 148, 236, 440;
+ fall of Eastern division (A.D. 1453), 167, 169, 172, 440, 441.
+Rome, 109, 138, 139, 143.
+Rosetta stone, 18, n.
+Rosseau, 300.
+Rubenstein, 88.
+Rutter, quoted, 186.
+
+
+S
+
+St. Anthony, 189, 190.
+St. Aquinas, quoted, 340.
+St. Bartholomew, massacre of, 117.
+St. Dennis, 307.
+St. Petersburg, 172.
+Salutaris Vibius, 42.
+Saracens, 26, 61, 110, 156-163.
+Sardinia, 143.
+Sardis, capital of Lydia, 56;
+ fate of, 58, 64, 68.
+Savage, Minton J., quoted, 413-415.
+Saxons, See _Anglo-Saxons._
+Saxony, 244, 250, 251.
+Schweinitz, 248.
+Scott, 0., quoted, 363.
+Scythia, 136, 139.
+Septimus Severus, Roman emp., 98, 224.
+Sergius, Pope, 344, 345, 346.
+Sickles, Daniel, quoted, 405.
+Siddartha, 409.
+Sienna, council of, 340.
+Simpson, quoted, 362.
+Sisera, 332.
+Smyrna, preservation of, 48, 64, 68.
+Socrates, 409.
+Spain, overrun by Saracens, 160.
+Sparta, 137.
+Spires, 140, 191;
+ diet of, 191, 253.
+Spiritualism, 411, 412.
+States-General, of France, 306.
+Strasburg, 140.
+Suevi, 215.
+Sultanies, Turkish, names of, 165.
+Sunium, 137.
+Symbols, See _Hieroglyphics_.
+
+
+T
+
+Tables of Laws, Roman, 214.
+Talmage, T. DeWitt, quoted, 363, 412.
+Temple of Reason, 309.
+Tertullian, 107;
+ quoted, 134, 224-226.
+Tetzel, 250, 251.
+Theodoret, 96.
+Theodoric, 148, 236.
+Theodosius the Great, Roman emp., 136, 440, n.
+Thermopylae, 137.
+Thrace, 137.
+Thuanus, quoted, 200.
+Thyatira, fate of, 64, 68.
+Tiberius Cæsar, Roman emp., 66.
+Tilsit, 172.
+Tmolus, Mount, 56.
+Toledo, council of, 339, 346.
+Toloso, council of, 339.
+Torgaw, 291.
+Tournay, 140.
+Tours, 161;
+ council of, 339.
+Trajan, Roman emp., 98, 104, 222.
+Trent, council of, 96.
+Tribunes, 214, also n.
+Tripoli, 143.
+Triumvirate, 214, also n., 351.
+Turenne, 307.
+Turin, 199.
+Turings, 215.
+Turks, See _Ottoman empire._
+
+
+U
+
+Universal Bishop, Pope styled, See _Papacy._
+Urban II., 96.
+
+
+V
+
+Valens, Roman emp., 440, also n.
+Valentinian, Roman emp., 143, 440, also n.
+Valerian, Roman emp., 98.
+Vandals, 25, 142, 143, 215.
+Vanosia, 347.
+Vatican, council of, 346.
+Vaudois, 196.
+Venaissin, 327.
+Venus, 241.
+Vicarius Filii Dei, blasphemous title of the Pope, 264.
+Victor Emmanuel, 255, 328.
+Victor III., Pope, 345.
+Vienna, attacked by Turks, 169;
+ congress of, 323.
+Visigoths, 138, 141, 146, 215.
+Voltaire, 297-302, 305, 306, 401.
+
+
+W
+
+Waddington, quoted, 94, 186, 346, 347.
+Wagram, battle of, 322.
+Waldenses, 113, 117, 161, 196, 200, 270, 339, 342.
+Warburton, quoted, 404.
+Waterloo, battle of, 324.
+Weishaupt, Dr. Adam, 300, 302, 403.
+Wesley, John, 368.
+Western Empire, See _Roman Empire_ also _Charlemagne_
+ and _Holy Roman Empire._
+Westphalia, 321.
+Wicks, Thos., quoted, 297-303, 321, 323.
+Wittemberg, 248, 249;
+ university of, 251.
+Wurms, 140.
+Wycliffe, 61, 340, 344.
+
+
+X
+
+Xerxes, 321.
+
+
+Y
+
+Yellowstone Park, 87.
+Yosemite Valley, 87.
+Yuruks, 58.
+
+
+Z
+
+Zend-Avesta, 406.
+Zoroaster, 406.
+Zurich, 292.
+Zwingle, Ulrich, reformer, 252.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Revelation Explained, by F. Smith
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Revelation Explained, by F. Smith
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Revelation Explained
+
+Author: F. Smith
+
+Release Date: August 20, 2004 [EBook #13229]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE REVELATION EXPLAINED ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joel Erikson, Christing Gehring, David King, and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<h1>The Revelation Explained</h1>
+<h2>An Exposition, Text by Text, of the Apocalypse of St. John</h2>
+<h3>Showing the Marvelous Development of the Prophecies from the
+Time of their Delivery on the Isle of Patmos&mdash;The
+Establishment and Growth of Christianity&mdash;Rise of
+Mohammedanism in the Eastern Empire&mdash;Of the Papacy in the
+Western Division&mdash;Of Protestantism&mdash;The Civil History of
+the Territory Comprising the Ancient Roman Empire until the End of
+Time&mdash;Together with the Conflicts and Triumphs of the Redeemed
+until the Final Judgment, and their Eternal Reward and Home in the
+"New Heavens and New Earth."</h3>
+<h2>By F.G. SMITH</h2>
+<h3>Author of</h3>
+<h3>"What the Bible Teaches" and "The Last Reformation," etc.</h3>
+<hr />
+<p>"Behold the former things are come to pass, and new things do I
+declare: before they spring forth I tell you of them." Isa.
+42:9.</p>
+<p>"Surely the Lord God will do nothing, but he revealeth his
+secret unto his servants the prophets." Amos 3:7.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>FOURTH EDITION</h3>
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page5" name="page5"></a>[pg 5]</span>
+<a name="preface" id="preface"></a>
+<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
+<p>The subject of prophecy should be of interest to every Bible
+student. Its importance can not be overestimated. By it we are
+enabled to ascertain our true position in this time-world. From the
+early dawn of creation, Inspiration has foretold with certainty the
+great facts connected with the history of God's chosen people. By
+this means alone, the divinity of Jesus Christ and the truth of our
+holy religion has been established in many minds; for it is not in
+the power of mortals thus to vaticinate future events. With such
+surprising accuracy have these predictions been fulfilled that even
+infidels ofttimes bear witness to their truthfulness. "Behold the
+former things are come to pass, and new things do I declare: before
+they spring forth I tell you of them." Isa. 42:9. "For I am God,
+and there is none else; I am God, and there is none like me,
+declaring the end from the beginning, and from ancient times the
+things that are not yet done." Isa. 46:9, 10.</p>
+<p>The Revelation is a rich mine of prophetic truth. The history of
+the current dispensation is there delineated in advance so
+perfectly that we can not but attribute its authorship to Him who
+knoweth the end from the beginning, and worketh all things after
+the counsel of his own will. It was written for the special benefit
+of the people of God, and we should give it prayerful
+consideration. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page6" name=
+"page6"></a>[pg 6]</span></p>
+<p>In the preparation for this work, I have gleaned historical
+information from all the general and ecclesiastical histories,
+encyclopedias, etc., within my reach, and only regret that I had
+not access to a still greater number. However, knowing that large
+books are seldom read, I determined in advance not to write an
+extensive work, but to condense the subject matter as much as
+possible, and, therefore, I have been obliged to omit much valuable
+material previously gathered. For this reason many lines of
+prophetic truth penned by others of the sacred writers have been
+passed over in silence, even though relating to the same events as
+certain symbolic visions in the Revelation.</p>
+<p>I have availed myself of all the helps and the commentaries
+within my reach in the study of this important subject. However, I
+have but seldom referred to the opinions of expositors. In most
+cases their explanations are not based upon any established rule of
+interpretation, and the definite laws of symbolic language are
+usually overlooked or disregarded. Ordinary readers of the
+Revelation have always supposed that the only course for them was
+to take the opinion of some learned expositor and to believe on
+<i>his authority</i>; and when they have found that equally learned
+and judicious men sustained the most opposite views, they have been
+bewildered amid conflicting opinions and have decided that, when
+such men were at issue, it was useless for them to investigate.
+While, therefore, I have made every available use of their
+opinions, it was only for the purpose of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page7" name="page7"></a>[pg 7]</span> forming my
+own and of enabling myself so to unfold the nature of the symbols
+that every one might see for himself the propriety of the
+interpretation given.</p>
+<p>The present knowledge that has been attained of this prophetic
+book is largely the result of the combined efforts of all who have
+labored to unfold its meaning. No one has had the honor of first
+understanding all its parts, and very few have failed to contribute
+something, more or less, to its true interpretation. Therefore I
+have endeavored as much as possible to gather up the good from the
+labors of my predecessors and to combine it with the results of my
+own study and research. The Exposition of Mr. Lord has had an
+important bearing on this work. For many beautiful thoughts
+concerning the nature and the use of symbols, in the chapter on the
+nature of symbolic language, I must acknowledge special
+indebtedness to the Lectures of Thomas Wickes on the Apocalypse,
+delivered many years ago, although I have ofttimes arrived at quite
+different conclusions in their interpretation throughout the
+Revelation. Much appreciated assistance has been derived from the
+works of other commentators as well.</p>
+<p>There is considerable disagreement among historians themselves
+regarding certain historical points, but their differences are of
+minor importance so far as the present work is concerned. When such
+points were involved, I have simply endeavored to follow the best
+authorities. Lengthy or important quotations from other writers
+have been duly credited where they appear, hence no special mention
+is necessary in this place. Minor extracts are merely enclosed
+within quotation-marks.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page8" name="page8"></a>[pg 8]</span>
+<p>The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, 6 Vols., Philadelphia,
+1872, is the edition of Gibbon's Rome from which quotations are
+made.</p>
+<p>To assist in simplifying the subject and in placing it before
+the reader in a concise, comprehensive manner, a number of useful
+diagrams have been added; for they serve about the same purpose in
+the study of a subject so complicated as do maps in the study of
+geography. I would especially call attention to the large "Diagram
+of the Revelation," where the various lines of prophetic truth are
+outlined in parallel series, enabling the reader to comprehend at
+once where the symbolic narrative returns to take up a new line of
+thought covering the same period of time. In these diagrams,
+however, no attempt has been made to set forth every phase of
+thought connected with the subject; only the main features have
+been outlined.</p>
+<p>Feeling directed by the Lord to undertake this work and
+realizing the greatness of the task, I have earnestly sought for
+divine wisdom and guidance, and I humbly acknowledge his gracious
+assistance in its prosecution; and while I can not indulge the hope
+that human fallibility has been overcome, yet I firmly believe that
+a careful reliance upon the Holy Spirit has been an effectual means
+of avoiding error and unfolding many of the hitherto mysterious
+prophecies of this wonderful book. To his worthy name I ascribe all
+praise and glory. The future, doubtless, will witness a still
+greater development of this subject; for men of God more worthy and
+possessing greater abilities will arise, who, beginning where we
+have left off, will continue its investigation and <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page9" name="page9"></a>[pg 9]</span> throw upon
+it additional light as yet unrevealed.</p>
+<p>That the Lord will bless The Revelation Explained to the good of
+his church upon earth and grant it a place, however small, in the
+cause of present truth, is my earnest prayer.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Yours in Christ,<br />
+F.G. Smith.<br />
+<i>Grand Junction, Mich., June 26, 1906</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h2>PREFACE TO FOURTH EDITION</h2>
+<p>The reception accorded this work when it was first submitted to
+the public was more than gratifying to the author. The lapse of
+time has only tended to confirm still more strongly the fundamental
+nature of the principle of interpretation adopted. In order to
+supply the constant demand, the fourth edition is now issued.</p>
+<p>I have taken advantage of this opportunity to make certain
+revisions necessitated by an increase of knowledge since the work
+was first written, nearly twelve years ago. This revision, however,
+did not require an entire re-writing and does not involve a change
+in fundamentals.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>F.G. Smith.<br />
+<i>Anderson, Ind., Mar. 1, 1918</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page11" name="page11"></a>[pg
+11]</span>
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+<p><a href="#preface">Preface</a><br />
+<a href="#nature">Nature of Symbolic Language</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap1">CHAPTER I.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap1-1">Introduction, verses 1-11</a><br />
+<a href="#chap1-12">Vision of Christ, verses 12-20</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap2">CHAPTER II.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap2-1">Message to Ephesus, verses 1-7</a><br />
+<a href="#chap2-8">Message to Smyrna, verses 8-11</a><br />
+<a href="#chap2-12">Message to Pergamus, verses 12-17</a><br />
+<a href="#chap2-18">Message to Thyatira, verses 18-29</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap3">CHAPTER III.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap3-1">Message to Sardis, verses 1-6</a><br />
+<a href="#chap3-7">Message to Philadelphia, verses 7-13</a><br />
+<a href="#chap3-14">Message to Laodicea, verses 14-22</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap4">CHAPTER IV.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap4-1">Vision of God's Throne</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap5">CHAPTER V.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap5-1">The Book with Seven Seals</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap6">CHAPTER VI.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap6-1">First Seal Opened, verses 1, 2</a><br />
+<a href="#chap6-3">Second Seal Opened, verses 3, 4</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page12" name="page12"></a>[pg
+12]</span> <a href="#chap6-5">Third Seal Opened, verses 5,
+6</a><br />
+<a href="#chap6-7">Fourth Seal Opened, verses 7, 8</a><br />
+<a href="#chap6-9">Fifth Seal Opened, verses 9-11</a><br />
+<a href="#chap6-12">Sixth Seal Opened, verses 12-17</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap7">CHAPTER VII.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap7-1">God's Servants Sealed, verses 1-8</a><br />
+<a href="#chap7-9">The White-Robed Company, verses 9-17</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap8">CHAPTER VIII.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap8-1">Seventh Seal Opened, verses 1-5</a><br />
+<a href="#chap8-6">First Trumpet Sounded, verses 6, 7</a><br />
+<a href="#chap8-8">Second Trumpet Sounded, verses 8, 9</a><br />
+<a href="#chap8-10">Third Trumpet Sounded, verses 10, 11</a><br />
+<a href="#chap8-12">Fourth Trumpet Sounded, verses 12, 13</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap9">CHAPTER IX.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap9-1">Fifth Trumpet Sounded, verses 1-12</a><br />
+<a href="#chap9-13">Sixth Trumpet Sounded, verses 13-21</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap10">CHAPTER X.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap10-1">The Rainbow Angel</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap11">CHAPTER XI.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap11-1">Temple and Holy City, verses 1, 2</a><br />
+<a href="#chap11-3">The Two Witnesses, verses 3-6</a><br />
+<a href="#chap11-7">The Witnesses Slain, verses 7-10</a><br />
+<a href="#chap11-11">The Witnesses Resurrected, verses
+11-14</a><br />
+<a href="#chap11-15">Seventh Trumpet Sounded, verses 15-19</a></p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page13" name="page13"></a>[pg
+13]</span>
+<p><a href="#chap12">CHAPTER XII.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap12-1">Woman and Man-Child, verses 1-6</a><br />
+<a href="#chap12-7">Michael and the Dragon, verses 7-12</a><br />
+<a href="#chap12-13">The Woman's Flight, verses 13-17</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap13">CHAPTER XIII.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap13-1">The Leopard Beast, verses 1-9</a><br />
+<a href="#chap13-10">"The Faith of the Saints," verse 10</a><br />
+<a href="#chap13-11">The Two-Horned Beast, verses 11-18</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap14">CHAPTER XIV.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap14-1">The 144,000 on Mount Sion, verses
+1-5</a><br />
+<a href="#chap14-6">The Three Angels, verses 6-11</a><br />
+<a href="#chap14-12">"The Patience of the Saints," verses 12,
+13</a><br />
+<a href="#chap14-14">Harvest of the World, verses 14-20</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap15">CHAPTER XV.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap15-1">Seven Last Plagues</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap16">CHAPTER XVI.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap16-1">The First Vial, verses 1, 2</a><br />
+<a href="#chap16-3">The Second Vial, verse 3</a><br />
+<a href="#chap16-4">The Third Vial, verses 4-7</a><br />
+<a href="#chap16-8">The Fourth Vial, verses 8, 9</a><br />
+<a href="#chap16-10">The Fifth Vial, verses 10, 11</a><br />
+<a href="#chap16-12">The Sixth Vial, verses 12-16</a><br />
+<a href="#chap16-17">The Seventh Vial, verses 17-21</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap17">CHAPTER XVII.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap17-1">"Babylon the Great," verses 1-6</a><br />
+<a href="#chap17-7">Beast and Ten Kingdoms, verses 7-18</a></p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page14" name="page14"></a>[pg
+14]</span>
+<p><a href="#chap18">CHAPTER XVIII.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap18-1">Fall of Babylon</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap19">CHAPTER XIX.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap19-1">Marriage of the Lamb, verses 1-10</a><br />
+<a href="#chap19-11">Coming of Christ, verses 11-21</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap20">CHAPTER XX.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap20-1">The Dragon Bound, verses 1-6</a><br />
+<a href="#chap20-7">The Dragon Released, verses 7-10</a><br />
+<a href="#chap20-11">The Judgment Scene, verses 11-15</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap21">CHAPTER XXI.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap21-1">New Heaven and Earth, verses 1-8</a><br />
+<a href="#chap21-9">The Heavenly Jerusalem, verses 9-27</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap22">CHAPTER XXII.</a></p>
+<p><a href="#chap22-1">River and Tree of Life, verses 1-5</a><br />
+<a href="#chap22-6">Christ's Coming and Eternity, verses
+6-21</a></p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page15" name="page15"></a>[pg
+15]</span> <a name="nature" id="nature"></a>
+<h2>Nature of Symbolic Language.</h2>
+<p>Before proceeding with the interpretation of this wonderful
+book, it will be necessary for us to pause and make inquiry
+concerning the nature of the language employed in its prophecies
+and concerning the mode of its interpretation. It will be seen at a
+glance that it is wholly unlike the common language of life; and it
+will be useless for us to undertake to ascertain its signification
+unless we understand perfectly the principles upon which it is
+founded.</p>
+<p>The question may be asked, "Is the language intelligible at
+all?" Considering the variety of interpretations placed upon it by
+expositors and the opinions generally held respecting it, we might
+conclude that it is not. The majority of the people look upon these
+prophecies as "a mass of unintelligible enigmas," and are ready to
+tell the student of Revelation that this book "either finds or
+leaves a man mad." But are we to look upon its language as being
+applied at a venture, without any definite rule, capable of every
+variety of meaning, so that we can never be quite <i>sure</i> that
+we have its correct interpretation?</p>
+<p>Commentators generally unite in attaching a definite meaning to
+certain symbols, and they tell us that these can not be applied
+otherwise without violating <span class="pagenum"><a id="page16"
+name="page16"></a>[pg 16]</span> their nature. They may not give us
+their reasons for thus applying them (in fact, they generally do
+not), yet it is evidently assumed that such reasons do exist. Now,
+if reasons actually exist why a definite signification must be
+applied to the symbol in the one case, why do they not exist in
+another case, and in all cases? If any law exists in the case at
+all, it is a uniform one, for a law that does not possess
+uniformity is no law; otherwise, it would be an unintelligible
+revelation, and the only possible thing left for us to do would be
+to attempt to solve it like a riddle&mdash;guess it out. It would
+be as if the writer were to use words with every variety of meaning
+peculiarly his own attached, without informing the reader what
+signification to give them in a given instance. No man has a right
+thus to abuse written or spoken language; and we may take it for
+granted that the God of heaven would not make such an
+indiscriminate use of symbolical language when making a revelation
+to men. There is no other book the wide world around in which
+language is as carefully employed as in the Bible; and we can rest
+assured that when God gave this Revelation to Jesus Christ "to
+<i>show</i> unto his servants things which must shortly come to
+pass," he made choice of proper symbols whose meaning can be
+definitely evolved, provided we can but ascertain the great
+underlying principles upon which their original selection was
+based.</p>
+<p>In the ordinary communication of our thoughts we employ
+arbitrary signs and sounds to which we have universally agreed to
+fix a definite meaning. Thus, our entire spoken language is made up
+of a great variety of sounds or words with which by long
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page17" name="page17"></a>[pg
+17]</span> practise we have become familiar. We call a certain
+object a horse, not because there is any similarity between the
+sound and the animal designated, but because we have agreed that
+that sound shall represent that object. So, also, we have agreed
+that the characters h-o-r-s-e shall represent the same thing; and
+by the use of twenty-six characters, called the alphabet, placed
+together in various combinations, we are able to write our entire
+spoken language.</p>
+<p>The incidents connected with the introduction of written
+language among a barbarous people are worthy of remark in this
+connection. That thought can be conveyed to persons at a distance
+by the use of certain cabalistic characters seems to them
+incredible, and when compelled to believe it, they look upon the
+person that can accomplish such wonders as embodying something
+supernatural. These things I mention merely to call attention to
+the fact that spoken and written language is a curious and
+wonderfully complicated affair. This is brought forcibly to our
+minds when we hear persons conversing in a foreign tongue, or when
+we pick up a book the characters of which are wholly unlike those
+of our own language. To us an English book is full of instinctive
+beauty, every letter or mark possessing a definite meaning that is
+instantly conveyed to our minds, because we have become familiar
+with them by diligent study and practise.</p>
+<p>There are other ways of transferring thought besides the
+complicated system just mentioned&mdash;ways which are much more
+natural and simple. Thus, a simpler way to represent a certain
+object would be to draw a picture of it; or, better still, to
+represent <span class="pagenum"><a id="page18" name=
+"page18"></a>[pg 18]</span> a certain character or quality by
+exhibiting, not the object itself, but an analagous one whose
+peculiar character that property is; for examples: the quiet,
+peaceful, gentle disposition of a child, by a lamb; a man of
+cunning, artful, deceptive disposition, by a fox; or a cruel,
+bloodthirsty, vindictive tyrant, by a tiger, etc. This is
+hieroglyphical or symbolic language. This language takes precedence
+over every other for naturalness and simplicity, being common to a
+greater or less extent among all nations and intelligible to
+all.</p>
+<p>Spoken language was undoubtedly a gift from God originally,
+while written language is probably a mere human invention. We are
+not to suppose that the first attempts to convey thought in writing
+would be by an alphabetical system, but by the symbolic, it being,
+as before stated, the most natural and within reach of the ordinary
+ingenuity of man. This is proved by the fact that the inscriptions
+on the ancient monuments of Egypt and the inscriptions of other
+nations of antiquity are of this character. It is also a fact
+worthy of notice that, four thousand years later, men of other
+countries and of other languages have, by much study and a careful
+comparison of the symbols, been able to decipher with accuracy
+those hierographical representations.<a id="footnotetag1" name=
+"footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a> This of
+itself is sufficient to establish the point that definiteness can
+be attached to the use and the interpretation of carefully-selected
+symbols, when the principles that governed their original selection
+are discovered.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote1" name=
+"footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+<p>The systems of hieroglyphical writing employed by various
+nations have, for the most part, remained unintelligible until a
+key of their interpretation was discovered. In 1799 M. Bouchard, a
+French captain of engineers, while digging intrenchments on the
+site of an old temple near the Rosetta mouth of the Nile, unearthed
+a black stone containing a trilingual inscription in hieroglyphics,
+demotic characters, and Greek. The last paragraph of the Greek
+inscription stated that two translations, one in the sacred and the
+other in the popular Egyptian language, would be found adjacent;
+hence this celebrated stone has afforded European scholars a key to
+the language and writing of the ancient Egyptians. The cuneiform
+writing of the Babylonians and Persians remained a mystery also
+until modern times, but great progress has now been made in the
+deciphering of thousands of inscribed clay tablets, cylinders,
+prisms, etc. The key to its interpretation is the celebrated
+inscription at Behistun, cut upon the face of a high rock three
+hundred feet above its base, and recording a portion of the history
+of Darius. It is written in the cuneiform characters, in three
+languages&mdash;Median, Persian, and Assyrian.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page19" name="page19"></a>[pg
+19]</span>
+<p>I do not wish to be understood as implying that the symbolical
+language of Scripture is identical with the hieroglyphics of
+ancient monuments. There may be different kinds of symbolic
+representations; but they are not arbitrary, as is spoken language,
+and can not be arbitrarily applied; a fixed law governs them
+all.</p>
+<p>Now, the book of Revelation is made up of this symbolic
+language. It is not, however, confined to this book alone. There
+are many instances of it to be found elsewhere in the sacred
+volume, and in many cases it is explained by inspiration itself,
+thus giving us a reliable key to the whole. Joseph's dream of the
+eleven sheaves that made obeisance to his sheaf was of this
+description (Gen. 37:7, 8), and his eleven brethren were angered,
+because its meaning was apparent&mdash;that they should be humbled
+before him. Also, his dream of the sun, the moon, and the eleven
+stars (verses 9, 10) was understood to signify the subjection of
+the entire family unto him, which was actually <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page20" name="page20"></a>[pg 20]</span> fulfilled
+after Joseph's exaltation in Egypt. The chief butler's dream of the
+vine with three branches bearing grapes, which he took and pressed
+into the king's cup, was interpretated by Joseph as signifying the
+butler's restoration in three days to his former position of
+cup-bearer to the king; while the chief baker's dream of the three
+baskets upon his head, out of which the birds ate, was
+interpretated as signifying his execution in the same length of
+time. Gen. 40. Pharaoh's dream of the seven fat kine and the seven
+lean kine, also of the seven full ears and the seven thin ears,
+signified seven years of plenty and seven years of famine. Gen.
+41.</p>
+<p>Again, the four divisions of King Nebuchadnezzar's wonderful
+image was explained by Daniel as signifying four universal
+monarchies and the ten toes as signifying the ten minor kingdoms
+which grew out of the fourth; while the stone that was cut out of
+the mountain without human intervention he interpreted as
+signifying the divine kingdom of God. Dan. 2. The two-horned ram of
+Daniel's vision (chap. 8), according to the explanation of the
+angel, symbolized the Medo-Persian empire, its two horns signifying
+the two dynasties of allied kings that composed it. The he-goat
+signified the Greco-Macedonian empire; his great horn, its first
+mighty king; and the four horns that replaced the great one when
+broken represented four kings under whom the empire would
+eventually be divided into as many parts. In the Apocalypse itself
+we have a number of symbols divinely interpreted, "The seven stars
+are the angels of the seven churches." "The seven candle-sticks
+which thou sawest are the seven churches." "The ten horns
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page21" name="page21"></a>[pg
+21]</span> which thou sawest are ten kings." "The waters which thou
+sawest ... are peoples, and multitudes, and nations, and tongues."
+"The woman which thou sawest is that great city which reigneth over
+the kings of the earth," etc.</p>
+<p>It will be seen that the great underlying principle or
+<i>law</i> upon which symbolic language is based is ANALOGY. An
+object is chosen to represent not itself, but something of
+analagous character.</p>
+<p>Webster defines <i>symbol</i> as follows: "The sign or
+representation of any moral thing by the images or properties of
+natural things. Thus, a lion is the <i>symbol</i> of courage; the
+lamb is the <i>symbol</i> of meekness or patience." Home, in his
+Introduction to the Study of the Bible, says: "By symbols we mean
+certain representative marks, rather than express pictures; or, if
+pictures, such as were at the time <i>characters</i>, and besides
+presenting to the eye the resemblance of a particular object,
+suggested a general idea to the mind, as when a <i>horn</i> was
+made to denote <i>strength</i>, an <i>eye</i> and <i>scepter,
+majesty</i>, and in numberless such instances; where the picture
+was not drawn to express merely the thing itself, but something
+else, which was, or was conceived to be, analagous to it." The main
+idea, then, as expressed in the foregoing definitions, is the
+representation of an object, not by a picture of itself, but by
+something analagous, such as the exhibition of moral qualities by
+images drawn from nature. But the use of symbols is not confined to
+the representation of moral subjects alone. Anything may be
+symbolized to which a corresponding analagous object can be
+found.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page22" name="page22"></a>[pg
+22]</span>
+<p>To establish the principle of analogy here laid down, it will be
+necessary to refer only to a few of the numerous examples of
+divinely interpreted symbols in the Scriptures. Any one can readily
+perceive the analogy between the seven fat kine of Pharaoh's dream
+and as many years of plenty; so, also, with the seven full, healthy
+ears that grew up on seven stalks. Likewise, the analogy between
+the seven thin kine and as many years of famine, and the seven
+thin, blasted ears that represented the same thing, is apparent.
+One fat kine or one full ear would symbolize one year of plenty,
+when crops were abundant; while seven would represent as many
+distinct seasons of prosperity, etc. Kine do not represent kine,
+but something analagous. The beasts of Daniel's visions do not
+represent animals like themselves, or a multitude of such animals,
+but something of analagous disposition. The analogy between a wild,
+ferocious beast, stamping upon or devouring everything within its
+reach, and a cruel, persecuting, tyrannical government is apparent.
+A horn does not signify a horn, but some great power, such as a
+dynasty of kings or rulers; and what the horn is to the animal in
+manifesting its desolating disposition, kings and rulers are to an
+empire in executing the persecuting or oppressive principles of the
+body politic. A pure, chaste virgin is used to symbolize the true
+church of God; whereas a corrupt harlot is chosen to represent an
+apostate church, and fornication her idolatrous worship.</p>
+<p>Although this principle is worthy of further elucidation, yet
+enough has been said to firmly establish the point that symbolic
+language is founded upon <span class="pagenum"><a id="page23" name=
+"page23"></a>[pg 23]</span> analogy. It is also clear that,
+whenever we attach a literal signification to a symbolic object, we
+immediately destroy entirely its use as a symbol. So we may accept
+it as one established landmark in the interpretation of the
+Apocalypse, that every symbol, regardless of the department from
+which it is taken&mdash;whether from the material universe, the
+animal kingdom, human life or the heavenly realm&mdash;stands as
+the representative, not of itself, but of some other object of
+analagous character not found in the same department from which it
+is drawn.</p>
+<p>This develops another important fact worthy of attention. If the
+great law of symbolic language is based upon analogy, it is clear
+to a demonstration that the symbols employed <i>must be</i>
+definitely applied. They can not be arbitrary, as the words
+composing our spoken language are. There is nothing in the nature
+of the thing to prevent our calling a horse an elephant, provided
+we had only agreed universally to adopt that designation of the
+animal referred to (arbitrary sounds can be arbitrarily applied);
+but we violate nature when we attempt to make a ferocious tiger the
+symbol of an innocent child, or represent a blood-thirsty tyrant by
+the symbol of a lamb. A disgusting, polluted harlot may be the
+proper symbol of an apostate church, but of the pure, holy church
+of God&mdash;<i>never</i>. A proper correspondence must be kept up.
+We must follow nature strictly.</p>
+<p>Symbols are drawn from every department&mdash;from animate and
+inanimate creation, from animal life and human life, from the
+visible universe below and the heavenly world above, and also from
+some objects of fancy to which there is no corresponding object in
+existence, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page24" name=
+"page24"></a>[pg 24]</span> such as Daniel's four-headed beast, or
+the one in the Revelator's vision with seven heads and ten horns;
+but in the selection of the same a proper correspondence of quality
+is kept up. The symbols that are chosen to set forth the great
+spiritual affairs of the church are such as are in themselves
+nobler than those selected to describe the political affairs of
+kings and empires, because in the divine estimation the church is
+of infinitely greater importance and occupies a more honorable
+position than worldly kingdoms. Thus, a beautiful virgin bride is
+chosen to represent the church of God; whereas a great red dragon
+with seven heads and ten horns is chosen to symbolize the Pagan
+Roman empire. The glorious body of God's reformers is set forth
+under the symbol of an angel from heaven, with his face as the sun,
+his feet as pillars of fire, and a rainbow upon his head; whereas
+the Saracen warriors of Mahomet are locusts upon the earth, with
+stings of scorpions. The department of human and angelic life is
+chosen to set forth the spiritual affairs of the church, while the
+department of nature and of animal life represents the political
+affairs of nations. To this general rule, there is at least one
+exception. Certain things connected with God's chosen people under
+the old dispensation are considered proper symbols to represent
+similar things or events in the New Testament dispensation, without
+special regard to the department from which they are drawn. Thus,
+the temple, altar, incense, candlesticks, holy city, etc., of the
+former age, though not taken from the department of human or
+angelic life, are, nevertheless, clearly used to represent affairs
+of the church, the analogy in the case being apparent <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page25" name="page25"></a>[pg 25]</span> because
+of their former prominence as connected with the Lord's covenant
+people.</p>
+<p>Again, when the symbol selected is that of a living, active,
+intelligent agent, it represents an analagous intelligent agent.
+Likewise, the actions of the former plainly denote analagous
+actions in the latter, and the effects produced by the actions of
+the symbolic agent signify analagous effects produced by the
+actions of the agent symbolized. To make it clearer: agents
+symbolize agents, actions symbolize actions, and effects symbolize
+effects. If this be not true&mdash;if agents can symbolize actions
+and effects as well as agents, or if actions can symbolize agents
+and effects&mdash;then all is an inextricable maze of confusion,
+and well may we repeat the words uttered by a certain minister to
+the writer, "The book should have been called Mystification, not
+Revelation."</p>
+<p>The same principle of analogy is carried out in another
+particular. Whenever the enemies of God or destructive agents are
+intended, objects of a corresponding desolating character are
+chosen as their symbols; whereas the peaceful triumphs of the
+cross, as exhibited by God's chosen people, are described under
+symbols of an equally benign and gentle character. Thus, the
+anti-christian, persecuting power of Rome is described as a
+ferocious wild beast, stamping everything beneath its feet and
+spreading desolation on every side. The Vandal hordes of Northern
+barbarians, who, under Genseric overran the Western Roman empire
+early in the fifth century, are symbolized by a volcanic mountain
+cast into the sea and spreading its streams of molten lava in every
+direction. The fearful pest of Mohammedanism is a <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page26" name="page26"></a>[pg 26]</span> dense
+smoke issuing from the bottomless pit and darkening the heavens.
+The Saracens of Mahomet are swarms of locusts appearing upon the
+earth, with scorpion stings, tormenting men five months, or,
+prophetically, one hundred and fifty years. On the other hand, a
+church is a candle-stick; its pastor, a beautiful star; the whole
+church, a virgin bride; the glorious assembly of God's reformers, a
+rainbow angel, etc.</p>
+<p>From the foregoing it will be seen that symbols are not words,
+but things, chosen because of some analagous resemblance to
+represent other things; and by a careful study of the nature of the
+symbols themselves we can ascertain where to look for their
+fulfilment. In the present work no attempt has been made to prove
+the interpretations given merely by the authority of learned names
+(for they can be arrayed on every side of a passage), but the
+nature of the symbols themselves has been developed; and the reader
+will be able to judge how nearly the known laws of symbolic
+language have been followed.</p>
+<p>It will be necessary, however, to notice another exception to
+the rules given, although it can scarcely be said to form an
+exception&mdash;it rather proves the very position taken.
+Undoubtedly, there are some few objects whose nature forbids their
+symbolization, there being no object in existence of analagous
+character that can be chosen as their representative. God,
+evidently, can not be symbolized; for where is the individual in
+heaven or on earth that can stand as his representative? "To whom
+then will ye liken God? or what likeness will ye compare unto him?"
+Isa. 40:18. Man can not represent him, angels can not; for whenever
+they appear on the panoramic <span class="pagenum"><a id="page27"
+name="page27"></a>[pg 27]</span> scene, they denote distinguished
+agencies among men. There may be certain symbols connected with his
+person, setting forth his divine attributes and proclaiming the
+eternal majesty of his name; but he himself is described as "One
+sitting upon a throne," before whom the created intelligences of
+earth and heaven fall down and worship unceasingly, but no symbol
+of Him is given. The same exception also applies to the person of
+Jesus, our Savior and Redeemer. While the human aspect of the
+Savior, as exhibited during the incarnation in his sacrificial
+death, may be properly symbolized by a lamb, as in <a href=
+"#chap5">chap. V</a>, there is no created intelligence in God's
+great universe that can be chosen to represent, in his true,
+essential divinity, Him who does not deem it robbery to claim
+equality with God. There may, likewise, be certain symbols
+connected with his person to give us at least a faint impression of
+his divine character and infinite majesty; yet when he appears upon
+the symbolic scene, he distinctly announces, "I am the first and
+the last: I am he that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am
+alive forevermore." "He hath on his vesture and on his thigh a name
+written, KING OF KINGS, AND LORD OF LORDS." So whenever the divine
+Christ appears on the symbolic scene, he comes in his own person,
+proclaiming his own name, and we need look for no symbol of
+him.</p>
+<p>Upon the opening of the fifth seal, the souls of the martyrs are
+represented as crying unto God from the altar for the avenging of
+their blood on those who dwell on the earth. Where is there an
+object in all creation analagous to a disembodied spirit? None can
+be found. It is easy to give them an arbitrary <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page28" name="page28"></a>[pg 28]</span> name;
+therefore they appear in the Revelation under their own appropriate
+title, as "the <i>souls</i> of them that were slain." Chap.
+<a href="#chap6-9">6:9, 10</a>, also <a href=
+"#chap20-4">20:4</a>.</p>
+<p>This exception applies to every case where no corresponding
+object can be selected as a symbol. Where the nature of the subject
+forbids its symbolization, there the description must of necessity
+be literal, and all such objects appear under their own appropriate
+titles. Otherwise, we are to look upon the entire book of
+Revelation as a vast collection of symbols whose interpretation is
+to be found, not in the department from which they are taken, but
+in another, to which they bear a certain analagous resemblance.</p>
+<p>Although not pertaining strictly to the subject of symbolic
+language, yet a word respecting the plan of the prophecy will be
+appropriate at this time. The prophetic events are not arranged
+after the ordinary plan of histories, narrating all the
+contemporaneous events in a given period, whether civil, religious,
+literary, scientific, or biographical, thus finishing up the
+history of that period; but it consists of a number of distinct
+themes running over the same ground. The proof of this assertion
+will appear as we proceed with the development of the
+prophecies.</p>
+<p>May the wisdom of heaven direct us in the perusal of this
+wonderful book of Revelation, and may we at last be "accounted
+worthy to obtain that world," and the glorious privilege of
+rendering eternal praise to "Him that sitteth upon the throne,"
+"upholding all things by the word of his power," "declaring the end
+from the beginning," and revealing his mighty works unto the
+children of men.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page29" name="page29"></a>[pg
+29]</span> <a name="chap1" id="chap1"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+<a name="chap1-1" id="chap1-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave unto him, to show
+unto his servants things which must shortly come to pass; and he
+sent and signified it by his angel unto his servant John:</p>
+<p>2. Who bare record of the word of God, and of the testimony of
+Jesus Christ, and of all things that he saw.</p>
+<p>3. Blessed is he that readeth, and they that hear the words of
+this prophecy, and keep those things which are written therein: for
+the time is at hand.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This book of the Revelation is frequently styled the Apocalypse,
+derived from the word by which it is designated in Greek. Jesus
+Christ having received it from God, its author, designed it for the
+future benefit of his church, and communicated it to his servants
+by the hand of the beloved apostle John. Its character is described
+by its title "Revelation," which signifies something revealed or
+made known; and its object was to "show unto his servants things
+which must shortly come to pass." This object of God's in
+delivering the Revelation to his church should be a sufficient
+refutation of the popular theory that this book is unintelligible,
+and its varied symbols wrapped in such deep mystery that their
+meaning can not be evolved; for it is not consonant with the
+supreme power and wisdom of the God-head to suppose that, in making
+a revelation to man, he would make the fatal mistake of clothing
+his language with a mystery <span class="pagenum"><a id="page30"
+name="page30"></a>[pg 30]</span> that defies the intellect of
+mortals to unveil. It is said of the things herein revealed that
+they "must shortly come to pass," by which is meant not that they
+were all to be completely fulfilled within a short time, but that
+the series of special events predicted were soon to begin. Thus, we
+speak of a century or eternity as near at hand, by which we mean
+that the events of the period spoken of are about to commence,
+although the end of the series may be very far off.</p>
+<p>But who are "his servants"? For whose benefit was the Revelation
+given? Surely it was for all those who become children of God by
+faith in Christ Jesus, from the beginning of the gospel
+dispensation when it was given, until the end of time; for a
+benediction is pronounced upon <i>all</i> those who read and hear
+its prophecies and "keep those things which are written therein."
+It was this promised blessing unto the earnest inquirers into the
+truths of Revelation that enabled the writer to decide to give
+these prophecies the consideration that is justly their due, and to
+recognize their infinite importance to the present church; "for the
+time is at hand" that will close the series of events herein
+predicted and usher in eternity. Every fulfilment of prophecy
+brings with it new duties, and enjoins fresh responsibilities upon
+the people of God; yea, "every revolving century, every closing
+year, adds to the urgency with which attention is challenged to the
+concluding portion of Holy Writ." Daniel prophetically described
+some of the events contained also in the Apocalypse, but he was
+told to shut up the words and seal the book <i>until</i> the time
+of the end, when "many shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall be
+increased."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page31" name="page31"></a>[pg
+31]</span>
+<p>It has been a matter of conjecture as to who the angel or
+messenger was that Christ sent to deliver the prophecies to John.
+Some suppose it to have been Gabriel, because of his having been a
+chosen instrument to deliver similar prophecies to Daniel. Some
+think it was Elijah, he having been translated that he should not
+see death, and afterwards appearing on the mount of
+transfiguration. Others think it was one of the redeemed sons of
+earth; because afterward, when rejecting the worship John was about
+to tender him, he says, "See thou do it not: I am thy
+fellow-servant, and of thy brethren that have the testimony of
+Jesus: worship God." Chaps. <a href="#chap19-10">19:10</a>;
+<a href="#chap22-9">22:9</a>. But we can not identify this
+messenger positively, as no definite information is given. To these
+revelations received John bore a faithful record of all things that
+he <i>saw</i>, implying the fact that they passed in vision before
+him and he beheld them as in a picture.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>4. JOHN to the seven churches which are in Asia: Grace be unto
+you, and peace, from him which is, and which was, and which is to
+come; and from the seven Spirits which are before his throne;</p>
+<a name="chap1-5" id="chap1-5"></a>
+<p>5. And from Jesus Christ, who is the faithful witness, and the
+first begotten of the dead, and the prince of the kings of the
+earth. Unto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in his
+own blood,</p>
+<p>6. And hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father;
+to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen.</p>
+<a name="chap1-7" id="chap1-7"></a>
+<p>7. Behold, he cometh with clouds; and every eye shall see him,
+and they also which pierced him: and all kindreds of the earth
+shall wail because of him. Even so, Amen.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page32" name="page32"></a>[pg
+32]</span>
+<p>8. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending, saith the
+Lord, which is, and which was, and which is to come, the
+Almighty.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The Apocalypse opens with the salutation of John to the seven
+churches in Asia, unto whom it was particularly addressed, and for
+whom special messages were prepared. There were other congregations
+of the church of God in Asia, or Asia Minor, besides the seven to
+whom the Revelation was sent, such as Colosse, Miletus, Troas, etc.
+Why only seven were addressed, we do not know, unless it be that
+the number seven is used, as elsewhere in the Sacred Volume, to
+denote fulness or completeness, being, as has been said, "a kind of
+memorial of the great facts of the first seven days of time which
+have divided all ages into cycles of weeks." So when we read of
+Christ's walking in the midst of the seven churches, we are to
+understand that he is in all the congregations of his people; and
+the ministers of the seven churches who are upheld by the Lord
+himself are representative, in one important sense at least, of the
+entire Christian ministry; for Christ has promised to be with them
+alway "even unto the end of the world." Mat. 28:20.</p>
+<p>This salutation of John's is one of great beauty and splendor,
+setting forth, as it does, the divine attributes of the great
+Jehovah in a striking manner as he "which is, and which was, and
+which is to come," an expression embracing eternity and designating
+the eternal, unchangeable God. The seven spirits before his throne
+describe the third person in the Trinity, as will appear clearer
+hereafter, seven being used as a sacred or perfect number
+designating his dignity <span class="pagenum"><a id="page33" name=
+"page33"></a>[pg 33]</span> and excellence. Some have supposed that
+seven angelic spirits were here described; but it is not consistent
+with the honor due the God-head to suppose that created
+intelligences should be exalted to a plane of equality with the
+supreme Deity. Moreover, they would probably have been described as
+seven <i>angels</i>, and not as seven <i>spirits</i>.</p>
+<p>Jesus Christ is mentioned next and more fully described, he
+being the direct author of the Revelation. He is "the first
+begotten of the dead, the prince of the kings of the earth," and
+the one "that loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own
+blood." The statement that Christ is the "first-begotten of the
+dead," is parallel to similar expressions in the Bible, where he is
+declared to be "the first-fruits of them that slept," "and the
+first-born from the dead." Though others had been restored to life
+before the resurrection of Christ, yet he was the first to rise
+with an immortal, glorified body. These expressions may also denote
+that Christ was the chief or central figure among all those who
+arose. But it was by virtue of his coming and of his victory over
+death that any were enabled to rise before his resurrection, as in
+the mind and purpose of God, who "calleth those things which be not
+as though they were" (Rom. 4:17), Christ was ordained to die and
+rise again, from the foundation of the world. He is the "prince of
+the kings of the earth" by virtue of his being exalted to the right
+hand of God, with "angels and authorities and powers being made
+subject unto him." 1 Pet. 3:22. "Far above all principality, and
+power, and might, and dominion, and every name that is named, not
+only <span class="pagenum"><a id="page34" name="page34"></a>[pg
+34]</span> in this world, but also in that which is to come." Eph.
+1:21.</p>
+<p>"Unto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own
+blood," describes the great atonement work of Jesus Christ, by
+which we are cleansed from all sin and made a royal, kingly
+priesthood unto God even in this world. Every soul that has
+received the blessed experience John here describes will be able to
+appreciate the unbounded rapture the beloved apostle felt in the
+contemplation of this wonderful theme of redemption that caused him
+to ascribe to God, its author, "glory and dominion forever and
+ever."</p>
+<p>This Jesus is he who will come again, not in humiliation and
+suffering, but in glory and honor; not as a Lamb to shed his blood
+for the sins of the world, but as the Lion of the tribe of Juda,
+with infinite power and majesty, causing all the kindreds of earth
+to wail because of him. The blasphemous Jews, who clamored for his
+crucifixion; Pilate, who delivered him up; and the Roman soldiery,
+who drove the nails and pierced his side, producing a death of
+greatest ignominy&mdash;all will see him when he comes. But while
+the proud enemies of God and the cruel oppressors of his saints are
+overwhelmed with terror at the sight of His person, the saints of
+all ages will shout for joy, saying, "Even so. Amen." "The
+judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether." In the
+face of this awful truth, how dare men assert that the second
+advent will usher in a thousand years of peace and tranquility,
+during which time the wicked will lie in their graves, when God's
+word declares that <i>every eye</i> shall see him when he
+comes?</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page35" name="page35"></a>[pg
+35]</span>
+<p>The present description of Christ closes with the statement that
+he is the Alpha and the Omega, which, being the first and last
+letters of the Greek alphabet, mean the same as "the beginning and
+the ending"; while the whole concludes with the statement that he
+is the one "which is, and which was, and which is to come, the
+Almighty"&mdash;which is the same as the description given of God
+in verse 4. Nothing in addition to this could be ascribed to
+Christ. Every attribute with which the Deity himself is invested is
+here ascribed to Jesus Christ. If our Savior is anything more than
+this description declares him to be, it is beyond the reach of our
+finite minds to comprehend. The sacred writers everywhere speak of
+him as a being worthy of worship and praise; and this fact, taken
+in connection with the universal proneness of men to take the honor
+from God and to give it to those who are no gods, is a convincing
+proof that Christ is God and, as such, is worthy of all honor and
+praise; and nowhere is there given in regard to Christ a warning
+caution such as John received from the angel at whose feet he fell
+to worship&mdash;"See thou do it not ... worship God."</p>
+<a name="chap1-9" id="chap1-9"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>9. I John, who also am your brother, and companion in
+tribulation, and in the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ, was
+in the isle that is called Patmos, for the word of God, and for the
+testimony of Jesus Christ.</p>
+<p>10. I was in the Spirit on the Lord's day, and heard behind me a
+great voice, as of a trumpet,</p>
+<p>11. Saying, I am Alpha and Omega, the first and the last: and,
+What thou seest, write in a book, and send it unto the seven
+churches which are in Asia; unto Ephesus, and unto Smyrna,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page36" name="page36"></a>[pg
+36]</span> and unto Pergamos, and unto Thyatira, and unto Sardis,
+and unto Philadelphia, and unto Laodicea.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>At the time the Revelation was given, John was a prisoner in the
+Isle of Patmos (now called Patmo or Patino), a small, desolate,
+rocky island in the Aegean sea, near the coast of Asia Minor, its
+greatest length from north to south being about ten miles, and its
+greatest breadth six. To this lonely place, according to Jerome and
+others, John was exiled during the reign of the tyrant Domitian, in
+A.D. 95. The reason of his banishment is given&mdash;"For the word
+of God, and for the testimony of Jesus Christ." Having confined him
+to this barren spot, the emperor no doubt thought he had
+effectually cleared the world of this preacher of righteousness.
+Doubtless the persecutors of John Bunyan<a id="footnotetag2" name=
+"footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a> thought
+the same when they had him shut up in Bedford jail. But when men
+think the truth is dead and buried out of sight, God suddenly gives
+it a resurrection with thirty-fold greater glory. It was so in this
+case. The giving of the book of Revelation&mdash;the writing on
+this spot of the history of the church in advance&mdash;has changed
+the name of this rocky island from deepest infamy to one of sacred
+interest and holy recollections. The death of Domitian occurred in
+A.D. 96, and his successor, the humane Nerva, recalled those who
+had been exiled because of their faithfulness to Christianity; and
+John returned <span class="pagenum"><a id="page37" name=
+"page37"></a>[pg 37]</span> to Ephesus, where he spent the
+remainder of his days, dying a natural death at the advanced age of
+about one hundred years.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote2" name=
+"footnote2"></a><b>Footnote 2:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+<p>John Bunyan (1628-1688) was a Puritan. After the restoration of
+the Stuarts to the throne, at the close of the English Revolution
+and the failure of the Commonwealth, he was imprisoned for twelve
+years "on account of non-conformity to the established worship." It
+was during this dreary confinement that he wrote his "Pilgrim's
+Progress," the most admirable allegory in English literature.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The humble manner in which John speaks of himself is
+affectionate. He does not represent himself to the churches as some
+great apostle or prophet, but as "your brother and companion in
+tribulation," a sharer with them in the trials and the persecutions
+that they were all called upon to endure. He also testified that he
+was "in the kingdom and patience of Christ," of which we will speak
+more hereafter.</p>
+<p>It was on the first day of the week, or the Lord's day, that the
+vision recorded in this chapter was given John, while he was "in
+the Spirit," or under the influence of the spirit of prophecy. He
+was commanded to write in a book the things that he saw and to send
+it unto the seven churches of Asia. It is important to bear in mind
+the fact that these visions are things that John <i>saw</i>, all
+the actors and events passing before him as a moving
+panorama&mdash;the most stupendous scene that human eyes have ever
+beheld, containing the future political history of various nations
+and kingdoms and also the history of the church in her different
+phases from the beginning until the final consummation. Of the
+seven churches we will speak more particularly hereafter.</p>
+<a name="chap1-12" id="chap1-12"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>12. And I turned to see the voice that spake with me. And being
+turned, I saw seven golden candlesticks;</p>
+<p>13. And in the midst of the seven candlesticks one like unto the
+Son of man, clothed with a garment down to the foot, and girt about
+the paps with a golden girdle.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page38" name="page38"></a>[pg
+38]</span>
+<p>14. His head and his hairs were white like wool, as white as
+snow; and his eyes were as a flame of fire;</p>
+<p>15. And his feet like unto fine brass, as if they burned in a
+furnace; and his voice as the sound of many waters.</p>
+<p>16. And he had in his right hand seven stars: and out of his
+mouth went a sharp two-edged sword: and his countenance was as the
+sun shineth in his strength.</p>
+<p>17. And when I saw him, I fell at his feet as dead. And he laid
+his right hand upon me, saying unto me, Fear not; I am the first
+and the last:</p>
+<a name="chap1-18" id="chap1-18"></a>
+<p>18. I am he that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am alive
+for evermore, Amen; and have the keys of hell and of death.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The hieroglyphic, or symbolic, characters now begin. Turning in
+the direction from which the voice came, John saw seven beautiful
+candle-sticks and standing in their midst, a personage whose
+appearance was inexpressibly glorious. John had recognized the
+voice of Christ announcing "I am the first and the last," but he
+was not prepared for the sight that met his gaze when he turned and
+found himself in the immediate presence of his August Majesty, the
+Son of God. A human form was there, but clothed in such vestments
+as proclaimed God; and no wonder mortality was overwhelmed when
+ushered into the presence of the uncreated Deity&mdash;he whose
+feet glowed as brass in a furnace, whose eyes were as a flame of
+fire, and whose voice was as the sound of many waters. Any man
+would have fallen as dead before such a personage as is here
+described. Men may talk atheism, but it <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page39" name="page39"></a>[pg 39]</span> is the
+atheism of the lips and of a coward heart, an atheism that would
+flee appalled before the burning footsteps of the Deity, and the
+irresistible conclusion would be, "It is God himself."</p>
+<p>John was not left in doubt regarding the identity of this
+personage; for, laying his hand upon the prostrate form of the
+apostle, he said, "Fear not; I am the first and the last: I am he
+that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am alive forevermore,
+Amen; and have the keys of hell and of death." The ever-living One
+entered death's domains and permitted himself to be bound with
+chains; but at his pleasure he broke them asunder, conquered death,
+and rose triumphant, carrying with him the keys of hell and of
+death; and he has ascended on high, alive forevermore; and at his
+voice all the dead will arise at his appearing, for the grave can
+no longer hold its victims.</p>
+<p>This vision settles an important fact&mdash;that when Christ
+appears upon the panoramic scene, he comes in his own person, and
+not in the character of a created substitute. There may be symbols
+connected with his person&mdash;the sword of his mouth may signify
+vengeance upon his enemies; his eyes as a flame of fire, superior
+intelligence and penetrating vision, etc.&mdash;but he distinctly
+announces himself to be the Christ of God. There is no creature in
+the universe that could personate "him that liveth, and was dead,
+but is alive forevermore."</p>
+<a name="chap1-19" id="chap1-19"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>19. Write the things which thou hast seen, and the things which
+are, and the things which shall be hereafter;</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page40" name="page40"></a>[pg
+40]</span> <a name="chap1-20" id="chap1-20"></a>
+<p>20. The mystery of the seven stars which thou sawest in my right
+hand, and the seven golden candlesticks. The seven stars are the
+angels of the seven churches: and the seven candlesticks which thou
+sawest are the seven churches.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Here John received a special commission to write the things of
+the future that were to be given, the things that were then taking
+place, and also certain events which had come under his personal
+observation during his life-time, and which were also included in
+the symbolic visions, thus covering the entire gospel
+dispensation.</p>
+<p>The special symbols employed in this introductory vision are
+here explained by Christ himself, thus leaving us in no doubt
+whatever. A star is a fit symbol of the position of a Christian
+minister&mdash;set in the church to give the light of the gospel of
+Jesus Christ to the world; while a candle-stick fitly represents
+the congregation working with him and sustaining him in his
+position. The special power of Christ&mdash;symbolized by his right
+hand&mdash;is manifested in upholding his ministers, while he walks
+in the midst of his churches, ready with the sword of his mouth to
+defend them from the attacks of their adversaries and to prove
+their constant Guardian and Protector.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page41" name="page41"></a>[pg
+41]</span> <a name="chap2" id="chap2"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+<a name="chap2-1" id="chap2-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Unto the angel of the church of Ephesus write; These things
+saith he that holdeth the seven stars in his right hand, who
+walketh in the midst of the seven golden candlesticks;</p>
+<p>2. I know thy works, and thy labor, and thy patience, and how
+thou canst not bear them which are evil: and thou hast tried them
+which say they are apostles, and are not, and hast found them
+liars:</p>
+<p>3. And hast borne, and hast patience, and for my name's sake
+hast labored, and hast not fainted.</p>
+<p>4. Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee, because thou hast
+left thy first love.</p>
+<p>5. Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent,
+and do the first works; or else I will come unto thee quickly, and
+will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except thou
+repent.</p>
+<p>6. But this thou hast, that thou hatest the deeds of the
+Nicolaitanes, which I also hate.</p>
+<p>7. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+the churches; To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the tree
+of life, which is in the midst of the paradise of God.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The special messages to the seven churches of Asia Minor are not
+of such thrilling interest as are the symbolic visions of the
+remainder of the book, yet we can learn many beneficial lessons
+from the various experiences of these congregations.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page42" name="page42"></a>[pg
+42]</span>
+<p>At the time the Revelation was given, Ephesus was the chief
+capital of Proconsular Asia and its pride and glory. It was also
+that country's chief mart of idolatry, containing, as it did, the
+magnificent temple of Diana, which is reckoned as one of the seven
+wonders of the world. This temple, according to the disclosures of
+modern excavations, was four hundred and eighteen feet in length,
+and two hundred and thirty-nine in width, with one hundred
+beautiful external pillars of Parian marble, each a single shaft
+about fifty-six feet high. The city was proud of the title it had
+received, "Servant of the Goddess," and even the Roman emperors
+vied with wealthy natives in lavishing gifts to her. One of the
+latter, named Vibius Salutaris, presented a large quantity of gold
+and silver images to be carried annually in procession.</p>
+<p>In this proud, wealthy, idolatrous city the apostle Paul planted
+a Christian church, and the great inroads the gospel made into the
+prevalent system of idolatry is shown by one circumstance mentioned
+in the Book of Acts. "And many that believed came, and confessed,
+and showed their deeds. Many of them also which used curious arts
+brought their books together, and burned them before all men: and
+they counted the price of them, and found it fifty thousand pieces
+of silver. So mightily grew the word of God and prevailed." Acts
+19:18-20. Fifty thousand pieces of silver would be equal to ten
+thousand dollars' worth, or, according to some estimates, six times
+that amount. But ten thousand dollars' worth of books on
+incantation and magic alone destroyed, considering the scarcity of
+books in that day, shows the wondrous extent to which the gospel
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page43" name="page43"></a>[pg
+43]</span> had been accepted. This was made the occasion of a great
+tumult in the city, when one, Demetrius, seeing that the prestige
+of Diana was diminishing, stirred up the people of the city against
+Paul and his companions, and cried vehemently, "Great is Diana of
+the Ephesians!" The souvenir silver shrines and images of this
+goddess, which had been in such demand by the multitudes of people
+constantly visiting the city, were no longer sought for when the
+knowledge of the one true God was made known; and well might
+Demetrius and his fellow-craftsmen be alarmed as their means of
+wealth disappeared.</p>
+<p>The spiritual condition of this church in Paul's time is worthy
+of notice; for it presents a striking contrast with its condition
+at the time when the special message of the Revelation was
+addressed to it. Paul in his epistle to the Ephesians taught them
+the glorious doctrine of entire sanctification (chap. 5:25-27), and
+they had received the experience; for he gives them the express
+command, "Grieve not the holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed
+unto the day of redemption." Chap. 4:30. And again, "After that ye
+believed, ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise." Chap.
+1:13. Their ministers, also, had been placed in their position by
+authority of the Holy Ghost, and were commanded to feed the flock.
+See Acts 20:28. When this was their heavenly experience, their
+"first works" of patience, love, and perseverance, were acceptable
+unto Christ; but it was not their present condition. A sad
+declension had taken place; therefore the declaration, "I have
+somewhat against thee, because thou hast left thy first love." This
+was no mere human estimate placed upon <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page44" name="page44"></a>[pg 44]</span> their piety, but it was
+their condition as Christ himself knew it to be. He "who walketh in
+the midst of the seven golden candlesticks," and knoweth the hearts
+of all men, declared they had fallen, and commanded them to repent
+and to do the first works. How sad that a congregation which had
+one time enjoyed the fulness of God's favor should fall from grace
+and be threatened with destruction by the Lord himself! But there
+is one consolation to be obtained from the experience of this
+church, and that is, that even if persons have enjoyed an
+experience of pardon and of sanctification and have lost it, there
+is a possibility of their recovering the favor of God, provided
+they "repent, and do the first works."</p>
+<p>But Christ, who in chapter <a href="#chap1-5">1:5</a> is said to
+be "the faithful witness," will not overlook anything that is good,
+nor censure a congregation unjustly. He finds in this church one
+fact worthy of commendation&mdash;their abhorrence of the deeds of
+the Nicolaitans. The infamous practises attributed to this party
+are promiscuous sexual intercourse and the eating of things
+sacrificed to idols. It is said to have derived its name from
+Nicolas, a proselyte of Antioch, who was one of the seven deacons
+appointed by the church at Jerusalem, Acts 6:5. But there is no
+satisfactory evidence that Nicolas was its founder; and it is the
+belief of many, that the sect attributed their origin to him simply
+to gain the prestige of his name. However, its mention in this
+connection is sufficient proof that at this time those corrupt
+principles had been widely promulgated.</p>
+<p>The letter closes with an admonition and a promise&mdash;an
+admonition to give heed to the things uttered <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page45" name="page45"></a>[pg 45]</span> by the
+Spirit, and a promise of everlasting life to the overcomer. This
+shows that Christ does not approve or condemn indiscriminately. If
+the great mass of professors continue in their backslidden
+condition, the individual that gives heed to God's Word and is made
+an overcomer will have a right to "the tree of life, which is in
+the midst of the paradise of God."</p>
+<p>What, may we ask, has been the fate of this church against which
+Christ uttered the threat of removal? There is no proof that they
+gave heed to the exhortation to repent, and the candle-stick has
+long since been taken away. Not a vestige of a church remains to
+mark the site of this once important congregation; nay, the city
+itself is no more, the stork, the jackal, and a few miserable
+Turkish huts alone remaining on the site of this once proud
+metropolis where thousands congregated and cried, "Great is Diana
+of the Ephesians!"</p>
+<a name="chap2-8" id="chap2-8"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>8. And unto the angel of the church in Smyrna write; These
+things saith the first and the last which was dead, and is
+alive;</p>
+<p>9. I know thy works, and tribulation, and poverty, (but thou art
+rich) and I know the blasphemy of them which say they are Jews, and
+are not, but are the synagogue of Satan.</p>
+<p>10. Fear none of those things which thou shalt suffer: behold,
+the devil shall cast some of you into prison, that ye may be tried;
+and ye shall have tribulation ten days: be thou faithful unto
+death, and I will give thee a crown of life.</p>
+<a name="chap2-11" id="chap2-11"></a>
+<p>11. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+the churches; He that overcometh shall not be hurt of the second
+death.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page46" name="page46"></a>[pg
+46]</span>
+<p>Smyrna was situated on a bay of the Aegean Sea, its beautiful
+harbor rendering it from time immemorial one of the most important
+commercial cities of Asia Minor. History does not inform us when
+the gospel was first introduced in this city; but at a very early
+date a large congregation existed there, with the venerable
+Polycarp as its pastor. He suffered death by martyrdom under the
+reign of Marcus Aurelius about A.D. 167.</p>
+<p>In each of the seven letters to the churches Christ introduces
+himself by some appellation significant of the character he assumes
+toward them. In this he styles himself "the first and the last,
+which was dead, and is alive," a fact very important for that
+congregation to remember during the great seasons of persecution
+and oppression through which they were to be called to pass.</p>
+<p>Against this church Christ has no words of condemnation to
+utter; all is encouragement and promise. Their condition of poverty
+is mentioned. It is probable that this very poverty arose because
+of their accepting Christianity and taking joyfully the spoiling of
+their goods; for it is a well-known fact that, when individuals
+embrace Christianity in an idolatrous land, they are disinherited
+by parents, cast out by relatives, and denied public employment.
+Even the community refuses to associate with them or to render them
+assistance in any form. Their means of subsistence is thus cut off,
+and they are harassed in every possible manner. Perhaps this is the
+very trial of poverty the church of Smyrna passed through; but
+Christ declares that they are rich: yea, God hath "chosen the poor
+of this world rich in faith, and heirs of the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page47" name="page47"></a>[pg 47]</span> kingdom
+which he hath promised to them that love him." Jas. 2:5. Their
+enemies may think that they have reduced them to a condition of
+wretchedness, but in this the persecutors are mistaken. God says
+the righteous are rich. A certain writer has remarked, "There is
+many a rich poor man, and many a poor rich man."</p>
+<p>The blasphemy of opposing, self-styled Jews is next mentioned.
+In all probability the term <i>Jew</i> is applied in its spiritual
+sense. Paul declares that "he is not a Jew which is one outwardly
+... but he is a Jew which is one inwardly" (Rom. 2:28, 29), and
+that "if ye be Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs
+according to the promise." Gal. 3:29. These persons professed to
+belong to the true "Israel of God" (Gal. 6:16), but they were
+without salvation; and the Smyrnaen church would not recognize them
+as belonging to the congregation, and therefore the only name that
+could be applied to them was "the synagogue of Satan." Had they
+been tolerated in the assembly of the righteous, Christ would have
+condemned or rebuked the church for not performing their duty, the
+same as he did the churches of Pergamos and Thyatira.</p>
+<p>Great persecutions for the church of Smyrna are predicted; but
+he "which was dead, and is alive forevermore," having passed
+through the ordeal of suffering and death himself, stands in a
+position to speak words of comfort and consolation, assuring them
+in the strongest terms that, although wicked men and the devil may
+cast them into prison and persecute them unto the death, yet "he
+that overcometh shall not be hurt of the second death." The
+overcomers <span class="pagenum"><a id="page48" name=
+"page48"></a>[pg 48]</span> are of the number of those who, having
+had "part in the first resurrection, on such the second death hath
+no power." Chap. <a href="#chap20-6">20:6</a>. The ten days
+doubtless are prophetic time (which will be explained later) and
+signify ten years, which was probably fulfilled in the terrible
+persecution that began under the reign of Diocletian, and continued
+ten years, or from A.D. 302 to 312.</p>
+<p>The subsequent history of Smyrna has been different from that of
+Ephesus, in that it has retained its name and importance until the
+present day, being the greatest commercial city in the Levant. It
+has a population of more than two hundred thousand, several
+thousand of whom belong to the Greek and Armenian churches. The
+light there has become dimmed, but let us pray that God will soon
+remember the faith and perseverance of his ancient servants and
+again trim the lamps that once shone so brightly.</p>
+<a name="chap2-12" id="chap2-12"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>12. And to the angel of the church in Pergamos write; These
+things saith he which hath the sharp sword with two edges;</p>
+<p>13. I know thy works, and where thou dwellest, even where
+Satan's seat is: and thou holdest fast my name, and hast not denied
+my faith, even in those days wherein Antipas was my faithful
+martyr, who was slain among you, where Satan dwelleth.</p>
+<p>14. But I have a few things against thee, because thou hast
+there them that hold the doctrine of Balaam, who taught Balac to
+cast a stumbling-block before the children of Israel, to eat things
+sacrificed unto idols, and to commit fornication.</p>
+<p>15. So hast thou also them that hold the doctrine of the
+Nicolaitanes, which thing I hate.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page49" name="page49"></a>[pg
+49]</span>
+<p>16. Repent; or else I will come unto thee quickly, and will
+fight against them with the sword of my mouth.</p>
+<a name="chap2-17" id="chap2-17"></a>
+<p>17. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+the churches; To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the
+hidden manna, and will give him a white stone, and in the stone a
+new name written, which no man knoweth saving he that receiveth
+it.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Pergamos was a city of considerable importance, the ancient
+metropolis of the province of Mysia and the residence of the
+Attalian kings.</p>
+<p>The description here given of Christ is in accordance with the
+character of the church addressed and the work he found necessary
+to perform in it. They are said to be located "where Satan's seat
+is." Pergamos was a city reputed to be "sacred to the gods" and was
+one of the headquarters of idolatry. There are numerous such cities
+now among the Hindoos and other idolatrous nations. These cities
+are regarded with peculiar veneration and sanctity, and they
+contain the most honored temples. In the midst of such surroundings
+the influences against Christianity would be very great.</p>
+<p>The congregation is commended because of its loyalty and
+steadfastness during a period of persecution in which Antipas was
+slain. When this persecution occurred, we are not informed; and as
+to the identity of Antipas, we are also left in uncertainty. Some
+suppose him to have been the elder of the church.</p>
+<p>Christ censures them severely, however, for tolerating persons
+in their midst who held the doctrine of Balaam and the pernicious
+sentiments of the Nicolaitans, and he threatens to fight against
+them with <span class="pagenum"><a id="page50" name=
+"page50"></a>[pg 50]</span> the sword of his mouth unless they
+repent. The doctrine of Balaam is partly explained&mdash;he "taught
+Balak to cast a stumbling-block before the children of Israel, to
+eat things sacrificed unto idols, and to commit fornication." When
+Balak desired Balaam to pronounce a curse against Israel, God by
+various means miraculously prevented Balaam's doing so; but Balaam
+craftily instructed Balak to make use of the women of Moab to
+seduce the men of Israel to sacrifice to their idols and to indulge
+in the licentious accompaniments to such idolatry. In many places
+in heathen countries to-day vile women are attached to the temples
+of the gods, and at certain stated feasts licentiousness becomes a
+sanctioned part of the religious celebration. Balaam's plan was
+successful. God was displeased with Israel, and because of this
+fornication there fell in one day twenty-four thousand. For a full
+account see Num. 22-25; 31:13-17.</p>
+<p>It would appear that the doctrine of Balaam and the doctrine of
+the Nicolaitans were classed as two different heresies; but the
+corrupt tenets of the latter were identical with those of the
+former, and the probable meaning is, "As the Hebrews had Balaamites
+among them; so, likewise, you have among you the Nicolaitans
+teaching the same pernicious doctrines." It is also a singular fact
+that the Hebrew signification of Balaam and the Greek of Nicolas is
+the same&mdash;"subduer of the people." Thus the doctrine of Balaam
+would stand as a representation of the principles taught by the
+Nicolaitans.</p>
+<p>The letter to this church also closes with an exhortation and a
+promise. Hidden manna and a white stone in which is inscribed a new
+name are rewarded <span class="pagenum"><a id="page51" name=
+"page51"></a>[pg 51]</span> the overcomer. The interpretations of
+this white stone have been various, but the difficulty seems to lie
+in determining which ancient custom is meant. The most satisfactory
+to my mind is that contained in the following account by Mr.
+Blunt:</p>
+<p>"In primitive times, when traveling was rendered difficult from
+want of places of public entertainment, hospitality was exercised
+by private individuals to a very great extent, of which, indeed, we
+find frequent traces in all history, and in none more than in the
+Old Testament. Persons who partook of this hospitality, and those
+who practised it, frequently contracted habits of friendship and
+regard for each other, and it became a well-established custom
+among the Greeks and Romans to provide their guests with some
+particular mark, which was handed down from father to son, and
+insured hospitality and kind treatment whenever it was presented.
+This mark was usually a small stone or pebble, cut in halves, upon
+each of which the host and the guest mutually inscribed their
+names, and then interchanged with each other. The production of
+these stones was quite sufficient to insure friendship for
+themselves or descendants whenever they traveled again in the same
+direction; while it is evident that these stones required to be
+privately kept, and the names written upon them carefully
+concealed, lest others should obtain the privileges instead of the
+persons for whom they were intended." So those who have obtained
+salvation and are overcomers through the blood have received the
+sure pledge of Christ's eternal friendship (which those who know
+not God can not receive) and are invited to partake of all of his
+hospitalities, even to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page52" name=
+"page52"></a>[pg 52]</span> "eat of the hidden manna," which is
+experienced by the truly sanctified.</p>
+<a name="chap2-18" id="chap2-18"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>18. And unto the angel of the church in Thyatira write; These
+things saith the Son of God, who hath his eyes like unto a flame of
+fire, and his feet are like fine brass;</p>
+<p>19. I know thy works, and charity, and service, and faith, and
+thy patience, and thy works; and the last to be more than the
+first.</p>
+<p>20. Notwithstanding I have a few things against thee, because
+thou sufferest that woman Jezebel, which calleth herself a
+prophetess, to teach and to seduce my servants to commit
+fornication, and to eat things sacrificed unto idols.</p>
+<p>21. And I gave her space to repent of her fornication; and she
+repented not.</p>
+<p>22. Behold, I will cast her into a bed, and them that commit
+adultery with her into great tribulation, except they repent of
+their deeds.</p>
+<p>23. And I will kill her children with death; and all the
+churches shall know that I am he which searcheth the reins and
+hearts: and I will give unto every one of you according to your
+works.</p>
+<p>24. But unto you I say, and unto the rest in Thyatira, as many
+as have not this doctrine, and which have not known the depths of
+Satan, as they speak; I will put upon you none other burden.</p>
+<p>25. But that which ye have already hold fast till I come.</p>
+<a name="chap2-26" id="chap2-26"></a>
+<p>26. And he that overcometh, and keepeth my works unto the end,
+to him will I give power over the nations:</p>
+<p>27. And he shall rule them with a rod of iron; as the vessels of
+a potter shall they be broken to shivers: even as I received of my
+Father.</p>
+<p>28. And I will give him the morning star.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page53" name="page53"></a>[pg
+53]</span>
+<p>29. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+the churches.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>To this congregation Christ manifests himself in the character
+of him "who hath his eyes like unto a flame of fire, and his feet
+like fine brass," denoting the fact that he is the great discerner
+of all hearts and that he is able to render unto every man
+according to his deeds. Whether the expression, "his feet like fine
+brass," has any particular signification, I am unable to say.</p>
+<p>This letter opens with a commendation of the works, the charity,
+the service, and the faith of this church. In these things they had
+made considerable advancement. Nevertheless, Christ had something
+against them, because they had suffered "that woman Jezebel" to
+teach false doctrines and to seduce the servants of Christ to
+compromise with idolatry and to commit fornication. It is
+improbable that Jezebel was her real name; but she was a Jezebel in
+character, named in this letter after King Ahab's wicked wife, who
+killed the Lord's prophets, seduced her husband into idolatry, and
+fed the priests of Baal at her own table. Some have supposed that
+this appellation designated a number or class of people teaching
+these doctrines; but the manner in which "her children," or
+disciples, are spoken of would seem rather to point out a
+particular woman&mdash;one who was a leader and the chief
+instrument of mischief.</p>
+<p>The long-suffering of Christ had been manifested in this case.
+He had given her an opportunity to repent of her evil deeds, but
+she would not. Now he declares that he will cause his judgments to
+descend upon her and her followers. By casting her into a bed is
+doubtless <span class="pagenum"><a id="page54" name=
+"page54"></a>[pg 54]</span> meant that he would bring her down upon
+a bed of sickness and pain and thus make her a most distressing
+object. Her partners in sin were to suffer "great tribulation," and
+"her children," or disciples, he would kill with death, or deadly
+pestilence. Thus would this whole corrupt party be visited with
+divine judgments according to their works; while their great
+pretensions to wisdom and discernment, "as they speak," or as they
+term it, will be shown to be nothing but the "depths of Satan."</p>
+<p>The frequent references to these gross sins in the letters to
+the churches may seem a little strange to us in the altered
+circumstances of society in which we live; but when we consider the
+tone of public sentiment and the prevalence of idolatry at that
+time, it will be seen that the lapse into these sins was very easy.
+Some compromised with the heathen by joining in their idolatrous
+feasts, maintaining that the meat was not affected one way or the
+other, and this proved but a stepping-stone to the licentious
+principles and the corrupt practises of those with whom they thus
+associated.</p>
+<p>The remainder of this letter is full of encouragement to the
+faithful. The only burden Christ placed upon them was a severe
+censure because they tolerated that abominable party in their
+midst. They were exhorted to continue faithful and were promised
+power over the nations. These they should rule with a rod of iron,
+the same as Christ, who received this power from his Father. The
+law, or rod, with which Christ, and his people with him, as
+<i>kings</i> and priests, rule the nations is the word of God, the
+most unyielding law, based upon the greatest authority, ever
+written. "Let <span class="pagenum"><a id="page55" name=
+"page55"></a>[pg 55]</span> the saints be joyful in glory ... let
+the high praises of God be in their mouth, and a two-edged sword in
+their hand; to execute vengeance upon the heathen, and punishments
+upon the people; to bind their kings with chains, and their nobles
+with fetters of iron; to execute upon them the <i>judgments
+written</i>: this honor have <i>all his saints</i>." Psa.
+149:5-9.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page56" name="page56"></a>[pg
+56]</span> <a name="chap3" id="chap3"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+<a name="chap3-1" id="chap3-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And unto the angel of the church in Sardis write; These things
+saith he that hath the seven Spirits of God, and the seven stars; I
+know thy works, that thou hast a name that thou livest, and art
+dead.</p>
+<p>2. Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain, that are
+ready to die: for I have not found thy works perfect before
+God.</p>
+<p>3. Remember therefore how thou hast received and heard, and hold
+fast, and repent. If therefore thou shalt not watch, I will come on
+thee as a thief, and thou shalt not know what hour I will come upon
+thee.</p>
+<a name="chap3-4" id="chap3-4"></a>
+<p>4. Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled
+their garments; and they shall walk with me in white: for they are
+worthy.</p>
+<p>5. He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white
+raiment; and I will not blot out his name out of the book of life,
+but I will confess his name before my Father, and before his
+angels.</p>
+<p>6. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+the churches.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Sardis was one of the chief cities of western Asia Minor. It was
+beautifully situated on the river Pactolus, in the middle Hermus
+valley, at the foot of Mount Tmolus, and was once the capital of
+the kingdom of Lydia, the place of residence of Croesus and other
+Lydian kings. It was a city of great opulence and splendor, and
+"distinguished for the voluptuous and debauched manners of its
+inhabitants."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page57" name="page57"></a>[pg
+57]</span>
+<p>To this church Christ introduces himself as "he that hath the
+seven Spirits of God, and the seven stars"&mdash;that is, he has
+control of the Holy Spirit's agency and of his ministers. Thus, the
+great spiritual agencies of the church are in his keeping to bestow
+or to take away as he pleases. Considering the dead condition of
+this church of Sardis, it was very appropriate for Christ thus to
+address himself to them. He has no words of commendation to offer,
+no works of charity, service, faith, and patience of which to
+approve. They had works, but these were not "perfect before God."
+They were threatened with sudden visitation, as unexpected as a
+thief breaking in unawares upon the slumbering inmates of a
+dwelling in the still hours of night. Their condition was different
+from that of any of the churches before mentioned. They are not
+charged with such vile practises as prevailed at Pergamus and
+Thyatira, the doctrine of the Nicolaitans had gained no foothold
+among them, yet their works were not perfect. "Thou hast a name
+that thou livest, and are <i>dead</i>." They had maintained the
+external form of religion, but the vital power of godliness was
+lacking.</p>
+<p>Although Christ could not commend this church as a body, on
+account of their lack of spirituality, yet he testified, "Thou hast
+a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled their garments."
+In the midst of all the cold formalism of professors and surrounded
+by worldliness and iniquity, a few preserved their Christian
+integrity and were approved by the Lord. "Pure religion and
+undefiled before God and the Father is this ... to keep himself
+unspotted from the world." Jas. 1:27. All such overcomers have the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page58" name="page58"></a>[pg
+58]</span> promise of being clothed in white raiment ("the
+righteousness of saints "&mdash;chap. <a href="#chap19-8">19:8</a>)
+and of having their names preserved in the "book of life" in heaven
+and confessed before the Father and the holy angels. Wondrous
+admission into the heavenly realm! Presented to the Father and the
+innumerable hosts of heaven <i>by the Lord, himself</i>, there,
+amid sacred environments, to enjoy the transcendent felicity of
+eternal blessedness! "They are worthy," saith Christ.</p>
+<p>Although this church was threatened with sudden visitation,
+there is no hint given of the manner in which this should be
+fulfilled, for the reason, perhaps, that it might be all the more
+unexpected. The church has long since passed out of existence. The
+city itself has lain in ruins for centuries, the modern village of
+Sart composed of a few huts inhabited by semi-nomadic Yuruks alone
+remaining near the ancient site. Cattle now graze on grassy plains
+once traversed by streets and thronged with the inhabitants of this
+superb metropolis.</p>
+<a name="chap3-7" id="chap3-7"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>7. And to the angel of the church in Philadelphia write; These
+things saith he that is holy, he that is true, he that hath the key
+of David, he that openeth, and no man shutteth; and shutteth, and
+no man openeth;</p>
+<p>8. I know thy works: behold, I have set before thee an open
+door, and no man can shut it: for thou hast a little strength, and
+hast kept my word, and hast not denied my name.</p>
+<p>9. Behold, I will make them of the synagogue of Satan, which say
+they are Jews, and are not, but do lie; behold, I will make them to
+come and worship before thy feet, and to know that I have loved
+thee.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page59" name="page59"></a>[pg
+59]</span> <a name="chap3-10" id="chap3-10"></a>
+<p>10. Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I also will
+keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all
+the world, to try them that dwell upon the earth.</p>
+<p>11. Behold, I come quickly: hold that fast which thou hast, that
+no man take thy crown.</p>
+<p>12. Him that overcometh will I make a pillar in the temple of my
+God, and he shall go no more out: and I will write upon him the
+name of my God, and the name of the city of my God, which is new
+Jerusalem, which cometh down out of heaven from my God, and I will
+write upon him my new name.</p>
+<p>13. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+the churches.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Philadelphia was once a large and powerful city, and it
+continued thus until later times. Prior to the time the Revelation
+was written, it had suffered severely from repeated earthquakes,
+which caused it to be almost deserted by its inhabitants.
+Subsequently, however, it recovered and became a prosperous,
+influential city.</p>
+<p>The character Christ assumes toward this church is that of the
+Holy and True&mdash;one who will justly reward them for their
+patience and perseverance&mdash;and by virtue of his possessing the
+key of David (a symbol of power and authority), he is able to place
+before them an open door which no man can shut.</p>
+<p>The character of this church is wholly unlike that of the
+preceding. In that, there was nothing to commend, but much to
+condemn; whereas to this, all is admonition, encouragement, and
+promise, because they had "kept the word of his patience" and had
+not denied his name. Christ knew their works and that <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page60" name="page60"></a>[pg 60]</span> they were
+worthy of approval. They still possessed "a little strength" and
+had not denied his name.</p>
+<p>Christ, who always upholds and rewards his faithful followers,
+although they be few in number and constitute the despised of
+earth, was not unrighteous that he should overlook this humble
+congregation of devoted disciples that had kept his word, but he
+made them a number of special promises <i>because</i> of their
+faith and perseverance. The first was the assurance that he had set
+before them an open door which no man could shut. A door is a means
+either of entrance or of escape, and signifies that God was going
+to open before them a greater field of enlargement and success, or
+else would furnish them a sure means of escape and protection from
+their cruel and relentless persecutors. It will be remembered that
+the church of Smyrna also received nothing but commendation and
+encouragement; but there was no promise of an open door to them. On
+the contrary, they were told that they should be tried, cast into
+prison, and suffer tribulation ten days. They were comforted,
+however, with a certain assurance of future reward and a crown of
+everlasting life. But before the church of Philadelphia there was
+opened a scene of greater prosperity, deliverance from enemies,
+greater enlargement, and the glorious prospect of seeing multitudes
+of souls brought under the influence of the saving gospel of
+Christ.</p>
+<p>The next promise was that of deliverance from opposing Jews, who
+were to be humbled before them. This refers, doubtless, to persons
+who had a mere profession of Christianity and who were not
+recognized by the congregation&mdash;the same as the blaspheming
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page61" name="page61"></a>[pg
+61]</span> Jews of Smyrna. The faithfulness of God's elect would
+eventually be the means of bringing them back to an experience of
+salvation, so that they would worship in the midst of the church
+again.</p>
+<p>Another promise to this congregation was, "I also will keep thee
+from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world."
+Some dreadful calamity is here predicted, during which the power of
+God would be mercifully manifested in granting this church a
+special preservation. Some suppose it to have reference to a great
+general persecution throughout the Roman empire, during which the
+Christians of Philadelphia would be spared. This may have been the
+fact; but whether it was or not, we have no means of information.
+When we come to consider the symbols of chapter 9, in which the
+delusive error of Mohammedanism is set forth, we will see what a
+period of sore trial this delusion was to the Eastern churches. It
+is also a fact that, in the midst of this abounding heresy, the
+church of Philadelphia was preserved as was no other church of
+Asia. When the followers of Mohammed were sweeping like a whirlwind
+over the Eastern empire, ravaging everything before them,
+Philadelphia remained an independent Christian city, when <i>all
+the other</i> cities of Asia Minor were under the power of the
+Saracen sword. It held out against the Ottoman power until the year
+1390 A.D., when it surrendered to Sultan Bayazid's mixed army of
+Ottoman Turks and Byzantine Christians (?). This was six years
+after the death of Wickliffe, "the morning star of the
+reformation," who opposed the corruptions of the Papacy, gave the
+world the first English translation of the Bible, and sowed the
+seeds that soon <span class="pagenum"><a id="page62" name=
+"page62"></a>[pg 62]</span> grew and produced a Huss, a Jerome, and
+a Luther. So God preserved the Christians of Philadelphia in the
+East until he began raising up others to herald his truth in the
+West, whose labors soon ripened into the glorious Reformation of
+the Sixteenth Century.</p>
+<p>His final promise to the overcomer is that he shall be made a
+pillar in the temple of God, and receive the name of God, of
+Christ, and of the New Jerusalem, or city of God. In some manner
+the Christian is labelled with the name of God, whose property he
+is; with the name of Christ, by whom he was purchased; and with the
+name of the New Jerusalem, or city of God, his inheritance and
+eternal abiding-place; and he is made a pillar in the temple of
+God. By turning to Heb. 12:22, 23, we find that the general
+assembly and church of God in this dispensation constitutes, in one
+important sense, the New Jerusalem, or city of God, in which the
+overcomers abide. "But ye <i>are come</i> unto Mount Sion, and unto
+the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem ... to the
+general assembly and church of the first-born, which are written in
+heaven." The church is also styled the house or temple of God,
+composed of people out of all nations who "are built upon the
+foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being
+the chief corner-stone; in whom all the building fitly framed
+together groweth unto <i>an holy temple</i> in the Lord ... for an
+habitation of God through the Spirit." Eph. 2:20-22. See also 1
+Cor. 3:17; 1 Pet. 2:5; 1 Tim. 3:15.</p>
+<p>To be a pillar in this temple of God means to occupy a
+conspicuous or useful position in supporting the truth, examples of
+which are to be found in such characters as "James, Cephas, and
+John, who seemed <span class="pagenum"><a id="page63" name=
+"page63"></a>[pg 63]</span> to be pillars" in the church in
+apostolic times. Gal. 2:9. In the last prayer of Christ to the
+Father, he says concerning his disciples, "While I was with them in
+the world, I kept them in thy name" (John 17:12); and since the
+church promised by Christ (Mat. 16:18) has been established, we
+continually bear the name of the Father, its title being the church
+or city of God. We also bear the new name of Christ, as explained
+in chapter <a href="#chap2-17">2:17</a>, and we meet together and
+worship in that name (Mat. 18:20), obeying the exhortation of the
+apostle Paul&mdash;"Whatsoever ye do in word or deed, do all <i>in
+the name of the Lord Jesus</i>, giving thanks to God and the Father
+by him." Col. 3:17. A better understanding of the manner in which
+we receive the name of God and of his city will be obtained when we
+come to the consideration of the followers of a false, degenerate
+church represented as receiving the "mark of the beast," by which
+they are designated.</p>
+<p>To inquire further into the history of this church, Philadelphia
+still remains with a population of about fifteen thousand. It
+contains a number of places of public worship, a resident (Greek)
+archbishop, and several inferior clergy. Mr. Keith, in his
+"Evidence of Prophecy," speaks of the then presiding bishop, and
+says that he acknowledges "the Bible as the only foundation of all
+religious belief" and admits that "abuses have entered into the
+church, which former ages might endure, but the present must put
+down." It is also a singular coincidence that the modern Turkish
+name of the city, Ala-Shehr, signifies "city of God."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page64" name="page64"></a>[pg
+64]</span>
+<p>This description of the church of Philadelphia I will bring to a
+close by adding the following extract from Gibbon, recorded in his
+noted history entitled "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire."
+It is of especial value since the writer, being an avowed infidel,
+can not be convicted of misconstruing historical facts in order to
+favor Christianity.</p>
+<p>"The captivity or ruin of the seven churches of Asia was
+consummated [by the Ottomans] A.D. 1312, and the barbarous lords of
+Ionia and Lydia still trample on the monuments of classic and
+Christian antiquity. In the loss of Ephesus the Christians deplore
+the fall of the first candle-stick of the Revelation. The
+desolation is complete; and the temple of Diana and the church of
+Mary will equally elude the search of the curious traveler. The
+circus and three stately theatres of Laodicea are now peopled with
+wolves and foxes. Sardis is reduced to a miserable village. The God
+of Mohammed without a rival is invoked in the mosques of Thyatira
+and Pergamus; and the populousness of Smyrna is supported by the
+foreign trade of the Franks and Armenians. <i>Philadelphia
+alone</i> has been saved by prophecy or courage. At a distance from
+the sea, forgotten by the emperors, encompassed on all sides by the
+Turks, her valiant sons defended their religion and freedom above
+fourscore years, and at length capitulated with the proudest of the
+Ottomans. Among the Greek colonies of Asia, Philadelphia is still
+erect&mdash;a column in a scene of ruins&mdash;a pleasing example
+that the path of honor and safety may sometimes be the same." Vol.
+VI., p. 229.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page65" name="page65"></a>[pg
+65]</span> <a name="chap3-14" id="chap3-14"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>14. And unto the angel of the church of the Laodiceans write;
+These things saith the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the
+beginning of the creation of God;</p>
+<p>15. I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I
+would thou wert cold or hot.</p>
+<p>16. So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot,
+I will spue thee out of my mouth.</p>
+<p>17. Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods,
+and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art wretched,
+and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked:</p>
+<p>18. I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire, that
+thou mayest be rich; and white raiment, that thou mayest be
+clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear; and
+anoint thine eyes with eye salve, that thou mayest see.</p>
+<p>19. As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten: be zealous
+therefore, and repent.</p>
+<p>20. Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my
+voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with
+him, and he with me.</p>
+<a name="chap3-21" id="chap3-21"></a>
+<p>21. To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my
+throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down with my Father in
+his throne.</p>
+<p>22. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+the churches.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Laodicea was one of the wealthiest cities of Asia Minor. It was
+built upon some low hills, and occupied an important situation in
+the center of a very fertile district. It was famous for its money
+transactions and for the beautiful soft wool grown by the sheep of
+the country, which facts are both alluded <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page66" name="page66"></a>[pg 66]</span> to in the
+message. Verses 17, 18. During the reign of Tiberius C&aelig;sar it
+was entirely destroyed by an earthquake, but its wealthy
+inhabitants rebuilt it immediately. A Christian church was soon
+planted there; for Paul makes the request that his epistle to the
+Colossians be read in the church of Laodicea and that his epistle
+to the church of Laodicea (which was not included in the New
+Testament canon) be read unto them. Col. 4:16.</p>
+<p>The condition of this church, according to the burden of the
+message, was worse than that of any of the others; for there is not
+only no commendation of former faith and piety, but it is not even
+said of them, as of the church at Sardis, that a few names were
+left who had not defiled their garments. Christ, who here
+represents himself in the character of the "faithful and true
+Witness," testifies that they are "neither cold nor hot." They did
+not have enough piety nor zeal to cause them to do anything for the
+honor of Christ and his cause, neither were they open enemies. They
+were merely lukewarm, insincere friends, and, as such, were in a
+position to do the greatest harm. A certain writer has said, "We
+always dread a professed but insincere friend; he is the least
+desirable of all relations."</p>
+<p>They are further described as being satisfied to remain in their
+lukewarm condition, indulging themselves in the riches and the
+pleasures of this life. Theirs was a rich, prosperous, influential
+church in their estimation, and they were proud of it; but "the
+faithful and true Witness" declares that they were "wretched, and
+poor, and blind, and naked." What <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page67" name="page67"></a>[pg 67]</span> a contrast this
+congregation presents with the churches of Smyrna and Philadelphia,
+whose poverty and "little strength" are expressly mentioned, but
+who were rich in spirituality, and who received no reproof, but
+words of comfort! They of Laodicea possessed no true gold from the
+mine of gospel truth, no white raiment of righteousness to hide
+their spiritual nakedness, no clear vision to enable them to
+discern the things of the Spirit. In fact, they lacked everything
+necessary to constitute a church of which the Lord could approve
+and which would be an honor to his cause. But notwithstanding their
+sad condition, Christ still pleads with them to repent of their
+doings and to allow him to come in and sup with them, promising the
+overcomer the privilege of sharing the throne of his Redeemer.</p>
+<p>On account of their lukewarmness a severe threat was
+uttered&mdash;"I will spue thee out of my mouth." Allusion is
+doubtless made to the former catastrophe that overthrew the city
+under Tiberius, thus giving them warning of the destruction that
+might come upon them in the future. The result has been in
+accordance with the prediction. God spued that church out of his
+mouth centuries ago, and nothing remains of that proud, wealthy
+city. Not even a Turk has any fixed residence on the spot. Its
+ruins alone remain in their desolation, "rejected of God, deserted
+of man, its glory a ruin, its name a reproach." The
+Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica says, "Its ruins are of wide
+extent.... There is no doubt, however, that much has been buried
+beneath the surface by the <i>frequent earthquakes</i> to which the
+district is exposed."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page68" name="page68"></a>[pg
+68]</span>
+<p>The prophecies concerning these individual churches have been
+fulfilled; so that even infidelity itself bears witness to the
+"strange verification of Apocalyptic promise and threatening." Two
+of the churches, Ephesus and Laodicea, where no spiritual souls
+remained, were threatened with utter extinction. They are now in
+utter ruins&mdash;forsaken, desolate. Sardis, too, where only a few
+names were left, is reduced to a small Turkish village, without a
+church or a Christian. Pergamus and Thyatira, where much
+spirituality remained, but where wickedness also was tolerated,
+still survive, though but mere remnants of their former greatness.
+While Smyrna and Philadelphia, where Christ found nothing to
+condemn and to whose churches he uttered only words of comfort and
+promise, remain until the present day and are the brightest spots
+on the whole scene, standing like erect columns in the midst of the
+surrounding ruins.</p>
+<p>I do not wish, however, to give too much prominence to the
+cities themselves in the fulfilment of these prophecies. The
+churches located in these seven cities of Asia were doubtless the
+main thing under consideration in the utterance of these promises
+and threatenings. Yet it is a singular fact that the subsequent
+history of the cities themselves has accorded in a remarkable
+degree with the nature of the prophecies uttered. It may be that
+God has preserved Smyrna and Philadelphia because of the piety of
+their ancient inhabitants.</p>
+<p>He who held the seven stars in his right hand and walked in the
+midst of the seven golden candle-sticks, still possesses the
+control of his ministers and is present <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page69" name="page69"></a>[pg 69]</span> in the
+congregations of the righteous; but let us all take warning from
+the example of the churches of Asia, and live such a life of
+devotion, charity, faith, and patience as Christ, the "faithful and
+true Witness," will approve of, that we may "walk with him in
+white" and have right to the "tree of life which is in the midst of
+the paradise of God."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page70" name="page70"></a>[pg
+70]</span> <a name="chap4" id="chap4"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+<a name="chap4-1" id="chap4-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>After this I looked, and, behold, a door was opened in heaven:
+and the first voice which I heard was as it were of a trumpet
+talking with me; which said, Come up hither, and I will show thee
+things which must be hereafter.</p>
+<p>2. And immediately I was in the spirit: and, behold, a throne
+was set in heaven, and one sat on the throne.</p>
+<p>3. And he that sat was to look upon like a jasper and a sardine
+stone: and there was a rainbow round about the throne, in sight
+like unto an emerald.</p>
+<p>4. And round about the throne were four and twenty seats: and
+upon the seats I saw four and twenty elders sitting, clothed in
+white raiment; and they had on their heads crowns of gold.</p>
+<p>5. And out of the throne proceeded lightnings and thunderings
+and voices: and there were seven lamps of fire burning before the
+throne, which are the seven spirits of God.</p>
+<p>6. And before the throne there was a sea of glass like unto
+crystal: and in the midst of the throne, and round about the
+throne, were four beasts full of eyes before and behind.</p>
+<p>7. And the first beast was like a lion, and the second beast
+like a calf, and the third beast had a face as a man, and the
+fourth beast was like a flying eagle.</p>
+<p>8. And the four beasts had each of them six wings about him; and
+they were full of eyes within: and they rest not day and night,
+saying, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and
+is to come.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page71" name="page71"></a>[pg
+71]</span>
+<p>9. And when those beasts give glory and honor and thanks to him
+that sat on the throne, who liveth for ever and ever,</p>
+<p>10. The four and twenty elders fall down before him that sat on
+the throne, and worship him that liveth for ever and ever, and cast
+their crowns before the throne, saying,</p>
+<p>11. Thou art worthy, O Lord, to receive glory and honor and
+power: for thou hast created all things, and for thy pleasure they
+are and were created.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is probable that the Apocalypse was communicated to John in
+parts, or consisted of a series of symbolic visions. This is
+indicated by the expression "after this I looked," and is also
+confirmed by the words following, "And immediately I was in the
+spirit," implying that the vision recorded in chapter <a href=
+"#chap1">1</a>, which was given on the Lord's day, had been
+interrupted and that a new one now began when the angel with
+trumpet voice gave summons for him to ascend to heaven "in the
+spirit" (or under the influence of the spirit of prophecy) to
+behold the events of the future, passing before him as a vast
+moving picture.</p>
+<p>This fact of John's ascension to heaven to behold certain
+visions of the future (which begin properly with chapter <a href=
+"#chap6">6</a>) will serve to explain many allusions to things said
+to occur in heaven, merely signifying that John was in heaven when
+these things were revealed to him, although their fulfilment was
+intimately connected with the affairs of the church on earth, for
+whose benefit the Revelation was given and unto whom it was
+sent.</p>
+<p>When the apostle ascended through the door that <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page72" name="page72"></a>[pg 72]</span> had been
+opened unto him, the first object that met his vision and absorbed
+his soul was a throne with the Almighty seated upon it, around whom
+all the inhabitants of heaven were assembled. No symbol of God is
+given, for the reason that there is no analagous object that can be
+chosen as his representative. True, John saw a throne, but that is
+a symbol, not of God himself, but of his supreme power and
+authority. One was seated upon the throne separate from the throne
+itself. It is not said that a jasper or a sardine stone was seated
+thereon, for that would be to make such an object the
+representative of God; but he that sat on the throne "was to look
+upon" like a jasper or sardine stone. The jasper mentioned was in
+all probability the diamond, and is described in chapter <a href=
+"#chap21-11">21:11</a> as a stone most precious, clear as crystal;
+while the sardine stone was a brilliant gem of a red hue. This
+description naturally suggests the vestments of a great monarch in
+a position of authority upon his throne. The main idea, then, as
+here expressed, is that the appearance of the Almighty was so
+inexpressibly glorious that it could be likened to nothing except
+the beauty of the most resplendent gems. But God himself appears in
+his own person, unrepresented by another, for the reason, as above
+stated, that no inferior intelligence of earth or heaven can
+analagously represent the uncreated Deity.</p>
+<p>The throne of the omnipotent One was surrounded by a beautiful
+rainbow of emerald clearness, and was probably a perfect one, or a
+complete circle, such as ours would be could it come wholly into
+our sight. The rainbow on the cloud, to Noah and his descendants,
+constitutes the sure pledge of God's covenant <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page73" name="page73"></a>[pg 73]</span> promise
+not to destroy the earth with another deluge; so, also, the bow
+surrounding the throne is a symbol of God's covenant favor with his
+people eternally.</p>
+<p>There were "lightnings and thunderings and voices" proceeding
+from the throne&mdash;the same outward manifestations as heralded
+the Godhead when he came down on Sinai to declare his holy law. The
+"seven lamps of fire burning before the throne" are said to signify
+the seven spirits of God. These are not lamp-stands or
+candle-sticks, such as the ones in the midst of which the Son of
+God walked on earth, but seven lights or flames of fire,
+representing the operation of the Holy Spirit upon the hearts of
+men and women. Surrounding the throne also was "a sea of glass like
+unto crystal." In the Greek it stands in a little different
+form&mdash;"And before the throne <i>as it were</i> a sea of
+glass." Describing the same object in chapter <a href=
+"#chap15-2">15:2</a>, the Revelator says, "I saw <i>as it were</i>
+a sea of glass." It was a broad expanse spread out before the
+throne with a glassy or transparent appearance like crystal. Its
+signification will be made clear hereafter.</p>
+<p>In addition to this description of the throne and Deity, our
+attention is directed to certain objects before and surrounding the
+throne. Four beasts and four and twenty elders are brought to view.
+The word <i>beasts</i> is a very unfortunate translation, being
+necessarily associated in our minds with the brute creation. It is
+not the word <i>therion</i>, which in thirty-five instances in the
+Apocalypse is translated beast, denoting an animal of wild
+disposition, but the word <i>zoon</i>, which signifies "a living
+creature," and is thus <span class="pagenum"><a id="page74" name=
+"page74"></a>[pg 74]</span> rendered by many of the translators of
+the New Testament. Their being full of eyes signifies sleepless
+vigilance and superior intelligence and discernment. The chief
+description given of the first living creature is that it was "like
+a lion." It is stated, not that the creature was a lion, but that
+it was "like a lion." It possessed some peculiar quality
+characteristic of the lion; namely, strength and courage. The
+second living creature, "like a calf," or, more properly, the ox,
+is symbolic of sacrifice or of patient labor. The third, with "a
+face as a man," denotes reason and intelligence. While the fourth,
+"like a flying eagle," is an emblem of swiftness and far-sighted
+vision.</p>
+<p>But the peculiar qualities thus symbolized are possessed by the
+four living creatures themselves, and what do <i>they</i>
+represent? To whom are the four and twenty elders referred? They
+are particularly distinguished from the angelic throng. In the
+ninth verse of the following chapter the elders and the living
+creatures represent themselves as the host of people redeemed by
+the blood of Christ "out of every kindred, and tongue, and people,
+and nation." The above-mentioned characteristics, then, are the
+peculiar possession of God's people&mdash;power and courage to
+attack all enemies and to gain the victory; a spirit of
+perseverance in patiently laboring for Christ, with a willingness
+to sacrifice their lives, if necessary, for the glory of God;
+ability to receive a "knowledge of the truth," that they may
+understand the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning them; and
+power and willingness to obey instantly when able to discern
+spiritual things, rising above the things of earth and the trials
+and persecutions of life&mdash;soaring away to <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page75" name="page75"></a>[pg 75]</span> loftier
+heights, there to bask continually in the blessed sunlight of God's
+eternal presence.</p>
+<p>Why was it necessary that the redeemed company of God's people
+should be represented by <i>four</i> living creatures? Doubtless
+because it would probably have been very difficult to select any
+<i>one</i> creature combining all the characteristics desired to
+represent all God's people of all ages. It is also a significant
+fact that all the people of God on earth were included in four
+great dispensations&mdash;ante-deluvian, post-deluvian, Mosaic, and
+Christian; although it is not certain that <i>four</i> living
+creatures were selected for the special purpose of showing the
+number of dispensations. However, this division of time is well
+established in the Bible. Peter reckons a new world beginning with
+Noah (2 Pet. 3:6, 7), stating that the old world had been
+destroyed. 2 Pet. 2:5. God came down upon Mount Sinai and delivered
+the old covenant, thus marking a distinct dispensation; while Jesus
+Christ established the new covenant and ushered in the fourth and
+last dispensation. See Heb. 12:18-24. Under the first dispensation,
+Abel by faith offered unto God an "excellent sacrifice"; men "began
+to call upon the name of the Lord" (Gen. 4:26); Enoch "walked with
+God" and "was translated that he should not see death"; while Noah,
+"a preacher of righteousness," was "perfect in his generation" and
+"condemned the world" by his preaching and obedience. The second
+dispensation was graced with a faithful Abraham, who "staggered not
+at the promise of God through unbelief, but was strong in faith,"
+from which circumstance he was called "the friend of God" and has
+justly received the title "father of the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page76" name="page76"></a>[pg 76]</span>
+faithful." In his footsteps followed Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, and
+Moses. The law age contains the names of many illustrious prophets
+of God, and the New Testament era abounds with brilliant examples
+of faith and devotion.</p>
+<p>The ministry of John the Baptist can not be said to form another
+dispensation, because of its short duration (he preceding Christ
+but six months), and being at the time unknown outside of a very
+limited territory. Another dispensation could not be begun and
+<i>completed</i> while the old covenant dispensation was yet in
+force; for that would make two dispensations in full force at the
+same time&mdash;a thing impossible. Also, John's work, according to
+the evangelist, marks the beginning of the gospel dispensation
+(Mark 1:1-4), from which time the kingdom of God was preached and
+men pressed into it. Luke 16:16.</p>
+<p>It was by virtue of the future atonement-work of Christ that any
+were enabled to enjoy God's favor in Old Testament times. Even
+their sacrifices, which originated in the family of Adam and which
+were continued from generation to generation, pointed forward to
+the sacrificial offering of the Savior and by this means purchased
+covenant favors with Heaven. So, after all, the atonement was for
+their benefit as well as for ours. Paul expressly informs us that
+Christ died for the "redemption of the transgressions that were
+<i>under the first testament</i>." Heb. 9:15. "Abraham, and Isaac,
+and Jacob, and <i>all the prophets</i>" are "in the kingdom of God"
+(Luke 13:28), and constitute a part of this great redeemed host set
+forth under the symbol of the four living creatures.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page77" name="page77"></a>[pg
+77]</span>
+<p>The four and twenty elders, although representing themselves as
+a part of this redeemed company, evidently have some special
+signification; for they are presented to us as separate characters
+from the four living creatures. Who are they? Undoubtedly they
+represent the ministers of God, the number twenty-four also
+signifying perfection or completeness, being drawn from certain
+facts connected with the two dispensations in which God has had a
+clerical ministry. The natural heads of the tribes of Israel were
+the twelve patriarchs; while the spiritual heads of the Christian
+church are the twelve apostles of the Lamb, they constituting a
+part of the foundation upon which it is built. Eph. 2:20. In a
+subsequent chapter we have an account of the sealing of the twelve
+tribes, by which is meant the sealing, not of the literal Israel,
+but of the spiritual, the twelve tribes being selected from the
+proper department to stand as a symbol of the true Israel in this
+dispensation, which is expressly said to consist of people of all
+nations. Natural Israel and spiritual Israel are frequently used to
+designate God's people; so, also, in the case before us the twelve
+patriarchs as heads of the natural Israel and the twelve disciples
+as heads (in one important sense) of the spiritual Israel are taken
+to represent the entire ministry. In the description of the New
+Jerusalem we find conspicuously inscribed the names of the twelve
+tribes of the children of Israel and of the twelve apostles of the
+Lamb, thus making the number twenty-four. Chap. <a href=
+"#chap21-12">21:12</a>, <a href="#chap21-14">14</a>.</p>
+<p>Although the ministers seem to be a special class among those
+constituting the redeemed multitude, yet their intimate connection
+with the remainder is set <span class="pagenum"><a id="page78"
+name="page78"></a>[pg 78]</span> forth under another
+symbol&mdash;that of wings <i>attached to</i> the four living
+creatures. Each of the four living ones possessed six wings, which,
+taken numerically, make up twenty-four again. The wings of a living
+creature would signify its means of flight; and it is by the action
+of the ministry, who "go into all the world" as flying messengers
+to preach the everlasting gospel, that the church of God is
+established among all nations. Thus, under the symbol of living
+creatures with wings is set forth the glorious harmony and unity
+that exists in the body of Christ between ministry and laity.</p>
+<p>The elders are represented as being clothed in white raiment and
+as possessing golden crowns. "White raiment" is a symbol of
+righteousness (chap. <a href="#chap19-8">19:8</a>), while crowns
+represent special power and authority. God's ministers possess
+both. They are made righteous through the blood of the everlasting
+covenant and are given power over all the power of the enemy and
+authority to heal the sick and to cast out devils.</p>
+<p>The entire company are engaged in worshiping God unceasingly,
+the elders casting their crowns before the throne, thus ascribing
+all praise, honor, and glory to Him who has delegated to them the
+authority they possess. And may we, my brethren, never grow weary
+in well-doing and conclude that the worship of God grows
+monotonous; but let us, with heart and soul, join the universal
+chorus, "Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page79" name="page79"></a>[pg
+79]</span> <a name="chap5" id="chap5"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+<a name="chap5-1" id="chap5-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And I saw in the right hand of him that sat on the throne a book
+written within and on the backside, sealed with seven seals.</p>
+<p>2. And I saw a strong angel proclaiming with a loud voice, Who
+is worthy to open the book, and to loose the seals thereof?</p>
+<p>3. And no man in heaven, nor in earth, neither under the earth,
+was able to open the book, neither to look thereon.</p>
+<p>4. And I wept much, because no man was found worthy to open and
+to read the book, neither to look thereon.</p>
+<p>5. And one of the elders saith unto me, Weep not: behold, the
+Lion of the tribe of Juda, the Root of David, hath prevailed to
+open the book, and to loose the seven seals thereof.</p>
+<p>6. And I beheld, and, lo, in the midst of the throne and of the
+four beasts, and in the midst of the elders, stood a Lamb as it had
+been slain, having seven horns and seven eyes, which are the seven
+spirits of God sent forth into all the earth.</p>
+<p>7. And he came and took the book out of the right hand of him
+that sat upon the throne.</p>
+<p>8. And when he had taken the book, the four beasts and four and
+twenty elders fell down before the Lamb, having every one of them
+harps, and golden vials full of odors, which are the prayers of
+saints.</p>
+<p>9. And they sung a new song, saying, Thou art worthy to take the
+book, and to open the seals thereof: for thou wast slain, and hast
+redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every kindred, and tongue,
+and people, and nation;</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page80" name="page80"></a>[pg
+80]</span>
+<p>10. And hast made us unto our God kings and priests: and we
+shall reign on the earth.</p>
+<p>11. And I beheld, and I heard the voice of many angels round
+about the throne and the beasts and the elders: and the number of
+them was ten thousand times ten thousand, and thousands of
+thousands;</p>
+<p>12. Saying with a loud voice, Worthy is the Lamb that was slain
+to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honor,
+and glory, and blessing.</p>
+<p>13. And every creature which is in heaven, and on the earth, and
+under the earth, and such as are in the sea, and all that are in
+them, heard it saying, Blessing, and honor, and glory, and power,
+be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb for
+ever and ever.</p>
+<p>14. And the four beasts said, Amen. And the four and twenty
+elders fell down and worshipped him that liveth for ever and
+ever.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The vision of this chapter is but a continuation of the
+preceding one, being a sublime description of the exaltation and
+office-work of Christ in his two-fold character as the Lion of the
+tribe of Juda and as a sacrificial offering for the sins of the
+world. The Apocalypse opens with the words, "The Revelation of
+Jesus Christ, which God gave unto him," and it is fitting that his
+special prerogatives and characteristics, together with the true
+position he occupies, should first be revealed. This was especially
+necessary in view of the fact to be revealed, that another would
+soon arise usurping the rights and prerogatives belonging to Christ
+alone, claiming to be supreme head of the church, sitting as God in
+the temple of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page81" name=
+"page81"></a>[pg 81]</span> God, and "showing himself that
+<i>he</i> is God." 2 Thes. 2:4.</p>
+<p>The attention of John was directed to an object "in the right
+hand of Him that sat on the throne"&mdash;a book sealed with seven
+seals&mdash;and to a mighty angel calling with a loud voice for
+some one to come forward and loose the seals and open the book. No
+created intelligence of earth or heaven dared to step forward and
+declare himself able to accomplish the result required, and because
+of this John wept much.</p>
+<p>The form of books in use when the Revelation was given was
+unlike those used now. They consisted of strips of parchment or
+other material, longer or shorter, rolled up. The book in the
+symbolic vision before us consisted of a roll containing seven
+pieces each one rolled and sealed separately, so that the outer
+seal could be broken and the contents of its strip read without
+disturbing the remaining ones. Had the seals all been on the
+outside, nothing could have been read until they were all broken;
+whereas the loosing of each seal was followed by some discovery of
+the contents of the roll.</p>
+<p>This book in the hand of God is symbolical of something. Most of
+the commentators think it represents the book of Revelation, in
+which case, of course, it would not include the present description
+of the book itself, but only of its contents as applied to
+subsequent chapters. But this view, of itself, is unsatisfactory
+for many reasons. The rules governing the use and the
+interpretation of symbolic language would forbid the thought of one
+book's symbolizing another book; for the main idea conveyed by the
+term <i>symbol</i> is, that the symbolic object stands as the
+representative, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page82" name=
+"page82"></a>[pg 82]</span> not of itself, but of something
+analagous. Reasoning by analogy, what would the contents of a
+sealed book in the hand of God symbolize? Evidently, the infinite
+counsels and purposes known only to Jehovah. Its being written
+within and on the backside would indicate that those purposes were
+full and complete, being all written out and understood by him who
+"knoweth the end from the beginning" and "worketh all things after
+the counsel of his own will." Its being sealed denotes that the
+contents were unrevealed, while its being in the right hand of
+God&mdash;the hand of his power&mdash;shows that he is able to
+carry into execution his divine purposes and that none shall be
+able to alter them or to wrest them from him.</p>
+<p>While the events future of John's time form a part of the great
+plan and counsels of Jehovah, yet it is taking a very limited view
+of the subject to suppose that they alone constitute the sealed
+book of this vision; for then would that greatest of all events,
+the atonement of Christ and the earliest triumphs of the gospel,
+have no special part in the sealed, mysterious counsels of the
+infinite One. It is much more consistent with the characteristics
+and attributes of God to make this book a symbol, not merely of a
+part, but of all his divine plans and purposes in the entire gospel
+dispensation. This position gains credence from the fact that the
+visions of the Revelation cover many times the whole period from
+the incarnation to the end. When the very first seal is broken, the
+early success and triumphs of the gospel, as experienced in John's
+lifetime, are portrayed. According to the vision before us, it was
+by virtue of Christ's death that he was able to open the book at
+all; and the plan of redemption <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page83" name="page83"></a>[pg 83]</span> itself, which is based
+upon his atonement, is declared by the Scriptures to be a "mystery
+which from the beginning of the world hath been <i>hid in God</i>."
+Eph. 3:9. This redemption scheme was the great center of attraction
+to the prophets of the old dispensation, who "inquired and searched
+diligently" that they might comprehend its deep mysteries, "which
+things the <i>angels desired to look into</i>." 1 Pet. 1:10-12.</p>
+<p>Now, if the contents of the sealed book were (at the time of
+this vision) only the history of events to be, why was it that no
+man on earth or in heaven, nor even an angel before the throne, was
+found worthy to "look into" it or to communicate its secrets to the
+children of men. Gabriel was sent as a worthy messenger to
+communicate to Daniel a long series of future events reaching even
+until the end of time. But the contents of this roll were such that
+no created intelligence of earth or heaven was able to unfold them.
+All remained unfathomable mystery&mdash;until Christ stepped
+forward in his character as a sacrificial Lamb and declared himself
+able to undertake the task of loosing the seals and of opening the
+book. "Unto you it is given to <i>know the mystery</i> of the
+kingdom of God" (Mark 4:11), he said to his disciples, "even the
+mystery which hath been hid from ages and from generations, but now
+is <i>made manifest</i> to his saints." Col. 1:26. "Verily I say
+unto you, That many prophets and righteous men have desired to see
+those things which ye see, and have not seen them; and to hear
+those things which ye hear, and have not heard them. Blessed are
+your eyes, for they see; and your ears, for they hear." Mat. 13:17,
+16.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page84" name="page84"></a>[pg
+84]</span>
+<p>The fact that the suffering and death of Christ was a past event
+at the time when the Revelation was given does not constitute a
+valid objection to the position taken, that the contents of the
+sealed book embrace the plan of redemption during the entire period
+of its operation; for the reason that, in order to form a complete
+and continuous narrative, past events are frequently referred to in
+the Apocalypse. Thus, John saw a beast with seven heads signifying
+seven kings; but he was expressly informed that "<i>five are
+fallen</i>, one is [exists at present], and the other is not yet
+come." Chap. <a href="#chap17-10">17:10</a>.</p>
+<p>When Christ appears on the symbolic stage, he is introduced by
+the elder as "the Lion of the tribe of Juda," and "the Root of
+David." The lion, being the king of beasts and the monarch of the
+forest, is indicative of power, such as Christ possesses. Christ is
+elsewhere denominated "King of kings and Lord of lords," and he
+himself laid claim to "all power in heaven and on earth," it having
+"pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell." Why he
+is termed "the Lion of the tribe of Juda," I am unable to say,
+unless the expression is borrowed from the prophecy recorded of him
+in Gen. 49:10&mdash;"The sceptre shall not depart from Judah, nor a
+lawgiver from between his feet, until Shiloh come; and unto him
+shall the gathering of the people be." His being the "Root of
+David" shows that he is the source and sustainer of David as to his
+position and power. David was specially ordained of the Lord and
+sustained by him. Of this there can be no doubt. David was a type;
+Christ is the antitype. David's position as ruler over natural
+Israel constitutes a type of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page85"
+name="page85"></a>[pg 85]</span> Christ's position as ruler over
+the spiritual Israel; and it is in this sense that Christ reigns
+upon the throne of his father David. Luke 1:32, 33. And since
+Christ came in the line of David's descendants, he is called the
+offspring of David and a rod out of the stem of Jesse. Isa. 11:1,
+10. His connection with the throne of David being evident, he is
+entitled to the right to reign over his people. The appellation
+<i>Lamb</i> is one of the peculiar titles by which the Son of God
+is designated, having reference to that part of his mission in
+which he constituted a sacrificial offering for sin. His forerunner
+John was able to prophetically discern him in this character, and
+pointed to him as "the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of
+the world." John 1:29. The Lamb was said to have seven horns and
+seven eyes. A horn is a symbol of power, and seven, being a sacred
+or perfect number, denotes the fulness of power possessed by
+Christ; while the seven eyes signify the seven spirits of God, or
+the Holy Spirit, which, being under the direct control of Christ,
+is sent forth into the world to effect the regeneration of men.</p>
+<p>When the Lion of the tribe of Juda stepped forward and undertook
+the task of revealing the secret counsels and purposes of Jehovah
+to the world, immediately a song of praise ascended from the lips
+of the redeemed sons of earth. The song was new, adapted to a new
+theme, and sung on a new occasion. "The four beasts and four and
+twenty elders fell down before the Lamb, having every one of them
+harps, and golden vials [censers] full of odors, which are the
+prayers of saints. And they sung a new song, saying, Thou art
+worthy to take the book, and to open the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page86" name="page86"></a>[pg 86]</span> seals
+thereof: for thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy
+blood out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation; and
+hast made us unto our God kings and priests, and we shall reign on
+the earth." This song beautifully expresses the honor due to Jesus
+Christ in his office-work as Redeemer of the world, by virtue of
+which people out of every nation, kindred, tongue, and people, are
+saved unto God and made kings and priests on the earth. The angel
+who appeared to the Judean shepherds while they were watching their
+flocks by night, comforted them with the welcome announcement:
+"Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy,
+which shall be to <i>all people</i>. For unto you is born this day
+in the city of David a Savior, which is Christ the Lord." Luke
+2:10, 11.</p>
+<p>Since the preaching of the gospel began, men are instructed to
+"seek first the kingdom of God" (Mat. 6:33), and they "press into
+it" (Luke 16:16) by the saving virtue of Him "who hath delivered us
+from the power of darkness, and hath translated us <i>into the
+kingdom</i> of his dear Son." Col. 1:13. Taking our place by the
+side of the writer of the Revelation, we testify with him that we
+are already "in the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ" (Rev.
+<a href="#chap1-9">1:9</a>), and that we "receive abundance of
+grace and of the gift of righteousness," whereby "we <i>reign in
+life</i> by one Jesus Christ." Rom. 5:17. In this happy condition,
+redeemed by the blood of Jesus, our Savior, made "a royal [kingly]
+priesthood" in the "holy nation" of "peculiar people" that have
+been gathered out of all nations of earth (1 Pet. 2:5, 9), we feel
+like singing anew this glad song of redemption in honor of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page87" name="page87"></a>[pg
+87]</span> Jesus, our only Lord and Savior, who is God over all,
+blessed forever! Amen.</p>
+<p>This new and rapturous song of the redeemed was immediately
+caught by a greater multitude of the angelic order, an innumerable
+company, even "ten thousand times ten thousand, and thousands of
+thousands," and together, with loud and united voices, did they
+swell the mighty anthem, "Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to
+receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honor, and
+glory, and blessing." And again the heavenly strain was raised to
+loftier heights, until the stupendous chorus rolled around the
+universe, by every creature in heaven and on earth, and under the
+earth, and such as are in the sea, saying, "Blessing and honor, and
+glory, and power, be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and
+unto the Lamb forever and ever." A few gifted voices of earth may
+possess such power and sweetness as almost to entrance us with
+their melody of song; but what an oratorio will it be, my brethren,
+when, released from the narrow limits of mortality, that sublime
+strain sung by the redeemed of all ages and ten thousand times ten
+thousand and thousands of thousands of angels, bursts in upon our
+ransomed souls! Did human thought ever reach the conception of
+music like this? Did the eyes of a mortal ever behold such
+rapturous scenes? You may feast your eyes upon earth's greatest
+beauty&mdash;Yosemite Valley, Yellowstone Park, Niagara Falls, may
+pass before your vision; you may climb the lofty Alpine summit and
+behold the snow-streaked and snow-capped peaks towering to the
+heavens around you&mdash;or you may listen to the best music ever
+composed by a Mozart, a <span class="pagenum"><a id="page88" name=
+"page88"></a>[pg 88]</span> Handel, or a Beethoven, or the finest
+ever executed by a Liszt, a Rubenstein, or a Paderewski; yet I must
+tell you upon the authority of God's word that "eye hath not
+<i>seen</i>, nor ear <i>heard</i>, neither have entered into the
+heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love
+him." 1 Cor. 2:9.</p>
+<p>This vision shows very clearly the lofty position to which
+Christ has been exalted, possessing "a name which is above every
+name"; for the entire company of angels and redeemed saints unite
+in extolling him with songs of praise, and that, too, before the
+very throne of the Deity and in the presence of his infinite
+Majesty. Surely we can not doubt that ours is a divine Savior, and
+one worthy of all praise, honor, power and dominion both now and
+forever.</p>
+<p>Though John beheld this wonderful vision in heaven, yet we must
+remember that it was given and recorded for the benefit of God's
+people upon earth. The plan of redemption was not actually revealed
+in heaven, for "Jesus Christ came <i>into the world</i> to save
+sinners" (1 Tim. 1:15), and it was here that he was ordained to
+"taste death for every man." Heb. 2:9. The ransomed company thus
+brought to view is intended to point out the redeemed of earth; for
+there is no salvation to be obtained in heaven, in which place no
+blood was shed&mdash;the blood is one of the agents that bears
+witness in the earth. 1 John 5:7, 8. The central figures of this
+vision were God, the Holy Spirit, and Christ, around whom the
+living creatures and elders were gathered, and they, in turn, were
+surrounded by the angelic throng. This entire scene was doubtless
+intended to represent the exalted character of spiritual things on
+earth, where the plan <span class="pagenum"><a id="page89" name=
+"page89"></a>[pg 89]</span> of redemption was revealed and the
+redeemed host gathered out of all nations. In a very important
+sense the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost all dwell in the
+spiritual church, or new Jerusalem, and are thus "in the midst" of
+God's people, surrounded by the redeemed host who unceasingly
+worship them, and they, in turn, have the promise that "the angel
+of the Lord encampeth round about them" (Psa. 34:7); yea, "an
+innumerable company of angels" reside in this "heavenly Jerusalem,"
+or "city of the living God," unto which we, as a part of the
+"general assembly and church of the first-born," "<i>are come</i>"
+in this dispensation. Heb. 12:22, 23.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page90" name="page90"></a>[pg
+90]</span> <a name="chap6" id="chap6"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+<a name="chap6-1" id="chap6-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And I saw when the Lamb opened one of the seals, and I heard, as
+it were the noise of thunder, one of the four beasts saying, Come
+and see.</p>
+<p>2. And I saw, and behold a white horse: and he that sat on him
+had a bow; and a crown was given unto him: and he went forth
+conquering, and to conquer.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>We have now reached the point where the thrilling interest of
+this book commences. With the opening of the seals of the book of
+God's purposes we have the prophecies of the future, the unfolding
+of the events to be, described under appropriate symbols. The
+contents of six seals are contained in this and the following
+chapter, while the seventh occupies the remainder of the
+volume.</p>
+<p>A word relative to the plan of the prophecies will be
+appropriate at this time. I will again state what will be made very
+clear hereafter&mdash;that the events are narrated by series, and
+not by centuries. A particular theme is taken up and carried
+through to its completion, then the narrative returns and another
+subject is traced to its end. Thus, the entire book consists of a
+number of distinct parallel series covering the same ground.</p>
+<p>Upon the opening of the first seal, John is summoned as with a
+voice of thunder by one of the living creatures to draw near; and
+the object that meets <span class="pagenum"><a id="page91" name=
+"page91"></a>[pg 91]</span> his vision is a white horse with its
+rider. The symbol is that of a victorious warrior, being drawn from
+the civil and military life of the Romans. The symbol is one of
+dignity. It does not consist of some inanimate object such as a
+mountain, a sea, or a river, neither is it a wild ferocious beast;
+but it is that of a living, active, intelligent being, and he, as
+denoted by various insignia, a conqueror. He rides a white horse,
+such as victors used in triumphal procession; his bow and crown are
+also symbols of victory. He goes forth conquering and to conquer,
+or to make conquests.</p>
+<p>This symbol is a faithful representation of the early triumphs
+of Christianity in its aggressive conflict with the huge systems of
+error with which it had to contend. Some have supposed that the
+rider represented Jesus Christ; but this can not be, for many
+reasons, two of which I will give. First. Christ always appears on
+the symbolic stage in his own character, unrepresented by another,
+for the reason, as before stated, that there is no creature that
+can analagously represent Him who claims equality with God. Not one
+name or attribute peculiar to him is mentioned in the description.
+Second. There are four horsemen brought to view in this chapter,
+and the symbols all being drawn from the same department, must have
+the same general application. If the first horseman symbolizes <i>a
+definite personage</i>, so do the remaining three; but we should
+have great difficulty in identifying the last three, giving them an
+individual application.</p>
+<p>Others make the first horseman a symbol of the gospel itself,
+but the gospel is not a living, active, intelligent agent, such as
+the symbol evidently is, but <span class="pagenum"><a id="page92"
+name="page92"></a>[pg 92]</span> is only a system of the revealed
+truth. All congruity and appropriateness in the comparison is
+lacking.</p>
+<p>But let us give this symbol further consideration. It is not
+enough that its interpretation alone be given, but the reader is
+justly entitled to a knowledge of the process by which we arrive at
+the truth. In the first place, we have a symbol of great dignity
+and excellence, and we must look for an object of corresponding
+character. The symbol is that of a living agent, and consequently,
+we must look for its fulfillment in an active, intelligent agent.
+The purity, or whiteness, of the horse on which the rider was
+seated would indicate an agency of mild, beneficent character.
+Finally, the symbol is drawn, as before stated, from the civil and
+military life of the Romans. Now, according to the laws of symbolic
+language, a symbol never represents an object like itself, but an
+analagous one in another department. A wild beast does not
+represent a wild beast, but something of analagous character. Seven
+fat and seven lean kine do not represent kine like themselves, but
+something analagous&mdash;seven years of plenty and as many of
+famine. There are only two great series of events described in the
+Revelation&mdash;the history of ecclesiastical events and the
+political history of certain nations. The present symbol is drawn
+from one of these departments&mdash;the political or the civil life
+of the Romans; and leaving the latter department to find its
+signification in another department, we have no place to go except
+into the department of ecclesiastical affairs. Entering, therefore,
+the spiritual realm, and looking about us for an object that
+perfectly meets every requirement of the symbol, we find it in
+<i>the humble ministers of Christ</i>, <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page93" name="page93"></a>[pg 93]</span> who boldly went forth in
+obedience to the divine command to extend the peaceful triumphs of
+the cross and to carry the gospel of the kingdom of God "into all
+the world." Mark 16:15-18; Mat. 28:19, 20. This succession of
+faithful, holy, devoted men is worthy of a place in Apocalyptic
+vision. They went forth "conquering and to conquer"; and the
+victories they gained were such as the world never witnessed
+before. Worthy are they to wear a victor's crown, for they have
+"fought a good fight."</p>
+<p>Because of its connection with events following, it is necessary
+for us to consider the divine position of these first ministers of
+the church. Their <i>equality</i> is clearly taught in the New
+Testament. Christ gave them the express command, "Be not ye called
+Rabbi: for one is your Master, even Christ; and all ye are
+<i>brethren</i>." Mat. 23:8. When two of the disciples manifested a
+desire to gain preeminence over their brethren and their
+aspirations displeased the ten, Christ said to them all, "Ye know
+that the princes of the Gentiles exercise dominion over them, and
+they that are great exercise authority upon them. But it <i>shall
+not be so among you</i>." Mat. 20:25, 26. Thus a perfect standard
+of equality in the ministry is lifted up. The beloved apostle, the
+writer of the Revelation, when addressing the elders of the seven
+churches of Asia in particular, humbly and affectionately
+represented himself as their "<i>brother</i> and companion in
+tribulation." Rev. 1:9.</p>
+<p>I will now adduce the testimony of several creditable
+historians, who are compelled to admit the humble equality of the
+New Testament ministry, notwithstanding <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page94" name="page94"></a>[pg 94]</span> the fact
+that some of them belonged to churches containing a very
+<i>unequal</i> ministry.</p>
+<p>Mosheim says: "The rulers of the church were called their
+presbyters or bishops, which two titles are, in the New Testament,
+undoubtedly applied to the same order of men.... Let no one
+confound the bishops of this primitive and golden period of the
+church, with those of whom we read in the following ages. For,
+though they were both distinguished by the same name, yet they
+differed extremely, and that in many respects." Vol. I, p. 99.</p>
+<p>This fact is now admitted by nearly all denominations, even
+Episcopalians. In the work entitled "Episcopacy Tested by
+Scripture," published by the Protestant Episcopal Tract Society,
+New York, the author, one of their able advocates, makes the
+following admission concerning the title <i>bishop</i> in the New
+Testament, "that the name is there given to the middle order or
+presbyters; and <i>all</i> that we read in the New Testament
+concerning <i>bishops</i>, including of course the words
+<i>overseer</i> and <i>oversight</i>, which have the same
+derivation, is to be regarded as pertaining to that middle
+grade"&mdash;the presbyters or elders. Page 12.</p>
+<p>The noted historian Waddington, also an Episcopalian, makes the
+same admission in the following words: "It is also true that in the
+earliest government of the first Christian society, that of
+Jerusalem, not the elders only, but the 'whole church' were
+associated with the apostles; and it is even <i>certain</i> that
+the terms <i>bishop</i> and <i>elder</i> or <i>presbyter</i> were,
+in the first instances, and for a short period, sometimes used
+synomously, and indiscriminately applied to the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page95" name="page95"></a>[pg 95]</span> <i>same
+order</i> in the ministry." Church History, Part I, p. 41. The
+italicizing is mine.</p>
+<p>The well-known historian Milman, also an Episcopalian, in his
+History of Christianity, says, "The earliest Christian communities
+appear to have been ruled and represented, in the absence of the
+apostle who was their first founder, by their elders, who are
+likewise called bishops, or overseers of the church." Page 194.</p>
+<p>Kurtz, in his Church History, says: "To aid them in their work,
+or to supply their places in their absence (Acts 14:23), the
+apostles ordained rulers in every church, who bore the common name
+of <i>elders</i> from their dignity, and of <i>bishops</i> from the
+nature of their office. That originally the elders were the same as
+the bishops, we gather with absolute certainty from the statements
+of the New Testament and of Clement of Rome, a disciple of the
+apostles. (See his first epistle to the Corinthians, Chaps. 42,
+44:52.) 1. The presbyters are expressly called
+bishops&mdash;compare [the Greek especially] Acts 20:17 with verse
+28, and Titus 1:5 with verse 7. 2. The office of presbyter is
+described as next to and highest after that of apostle (Acts 15:6,
+22). Similarly, the elders are represented as those to whom alone
+the rule, the teaching and the care of the church is entrusted (1
+Tim. 5:17; 1 Pet. 5:1, etc.).... In [several] passages of the New
+Testament and of Clement we read of many bishops in one and the
+same church. In the face of such indubitable evidence, it is
+difficult to account for the pertinacity with which Romish and
+Anglican theologians insist that these two offices had from the
+first been different in name <span class="pagenum"><a id="page96"
+name="page96"></a>[pg 96]</span> and functions.... Even Jerome,
+Augustine, Urban II. (1091) and Petrus Lombardus admit that
+originally the two had been identical. It was reserved for the
+Council of Trent to convert this truth into a heresy." Pages 67,
+68. Chrysostom, Theodoret, and others also admitted the same.</p>
+<p>Many similar historical testimonies now lying before me to the
+humble equality of the New Testament ministry could be added; but
+lest the reader become weary, I will conclude with the following
+beautiful description from D'Aubigne in his noted History of the
+Reformation: "The church was in the beginning a community of
+brethren, guided by a few of the <i>brethren</i>." Again, "All
+Christians were priests of the living God, with <i>humble
+pastors</i> as their guides." Vol. I, pp. 35, 50.</p>
+<p>With this description of the early ministers of Christ, who went
+forth under the symbol of the first horseman to disciple all
+nations, we have the events pertaining to the early history of the
+church, laid before us; until the opening of the second seal brings
+us to another important phase of its history.</p>
+<a name="chap6-3" id="chap6-3"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>3. And when he had opened the second seal, I heard the second
+beast say, Come and see.</p>
+<p>4. And there went out another horse that was red: and power was
+given to him that sat thereon to take peace from the earth, and
+that they should kill one another: and there was given unto him a
+great sword.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The symbol of this seal is that of a rider going forth on a red
+horse armed with a great sword with which to take peace from the
+earth and to kill. It <span class="pagenum"><a id="page97" name=
+"page97"></a>[pg 97]</span> is drawn from the same source as that
+of the preceding one, but differing greatly in the character of the
+horseman and the object of his mission. The symbol is one of great
+dignity&mdash;a living, intelligent agent&mdash;drawn from civil
+and military life. For the same reason as given before, we must go
+out of the department of civil life into the history of religious
+affairs to find its fulfilment.</p>
+<p>Notice, also, the peculiar characteristics of this horseman and
+wherein he differs from that of the first seal. The color of the
+horse is red, denoting something very different from the peace,
+purity, and benignity of the white. Instead of gaining glorious
+spiritual conquests and triumphs, like him of the first seal, he
+was to take peace from the earth. In the place of a victor's crown,
+he possesses "a great sword" with which to kill, denoting an agent
+of great destruction.</p>
+<p>Where shall we look in the history of religious affairs to find
+the object that meets the requirements of this symbol? Who were the
+active, intelligent agents that appeared as the great opposers of
+the establishment of Christianity by the rider of the white horse?
+We find the answer undoubtedly in the propagators of the <i>Pagan
+religions</i>. As soon as Christianity began to gain a foothold in
+the Roman Empire, the priests and supporters of Paganism were
+exasperated to the last degree, and they determined to crush out
+the Christian religion. An example of Pagan opposition is found in
+the nineteenth chapter of Acts, where it is recorded that the
+preaching of the gospel so stirred the people of Ephesus that they
+were filled with wrath and for the space of about two <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page98" name="page98"></a>[pg 98]</span> hours
+cried out, saying, "Great is Diana of the Ephesians!" This great
+conflict between Christianity and Paganism will be more fully
+described under other symbols in a subsequent chapter, therefore I
+will make this description brief.</p>
+<p>The destruction of life brought about by this rider of the red
+horse doubtless signifies the great slaughter of the Christians at
+the hands of the Pagans. During ten seasons of severe persecution,
+which occurred under the reigns of the emperors Nero, Domitian,
+Trajan, Marcus Aurelius, Septimus Severus, Maximus, Decius, Gallus,
+Valerian, and Diocletian, the Christians suffered every indignity
+that their relentless persecutors could heap upon them. They had
+their eyes burned out with red-hot irons; they were dragged about
+with ropes until life was extinct; they were beheaded, stoned to
+death, crucified, thrown to wild beasts, burned at the stake; yet
+"they overcame by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of their
+testimony; and they loved not their lives unto the death." Chap.
+<a href="#chap12-11">12:11</a>.</p>
+<p>It may appear at first that taking the rider of the horse as a
+symbolic agent but the killing which he effected as literal, is an
+inconsistency and a variation from the laws of symbolic language;
+but such is not necessarily the case. One principle laid down in
+the beginning was, that the description of an object or event must
+necessarily be literal when no symbolic object could be found to
+analagously represent it. The destruction of human life could not
+well be represented symbolically, there being no destruction
+analagous to it whose meaning would be obvious; hence it must
+appear as a literal description. This is proved <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page99" name="page99"></a>[pg 99]</span> by many
+texts in the Revelation that will admit of no other application;
+such as verses <a href="#chap6-9">9-11</a> of this chapter; chapter
+<a href="#chap13-10">13:10</a>; <a href="#chap17-6">17:6</a>;
+etc.</p>
+<p>But the literal destruction of life may be chosen as a symbol to
+represent a destruction to which it is plainly analagous; such as
+the destruction of spiritual life, the overthrow of the civil or
+ecclesiastical institutions of society, etc. That it is sometimes
+employed thus as a symbol will be shown clearly in subsequent
+chapters. Hence, in every instance where killing men is the work of
+a symbolic agent, the context, or general series of events with
+which it is connected, must determine whether the literal or
+symbolical signification is intended. In the present prophecy under
+consideration it is much more consistent to give it the literal
+application; for the devotees of Paganism did not destroy the
+spiritual life of the church, which would be an analagous killing;
+neither did they succeed in overthrowing the structure of
+Christianity.</p>
+<a name="chap6-5" id="chap6-5"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>5. And when he had opened the third seal, I heard the third
+beast say, Come and see. And I beheld, and lo a black horse; and he
+that sat on him had a pair of balances in his hand.</p>
+<p>6. And I heard a voice in the midst of the four beasts say, A
+measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley for a
+penny; and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This symbol is also that of a horseman, differing from the
+preceding ones only in his characteristics. He is seated upon a
+black horse, denoting something dark or appalling in its nature,
+the very opposite of that of the first seal. He possesses no bow
+nor crown, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page100" name=
+"page100"></a>[pg 100]</span> but instead he has a pair of balances
+in his hand for weighing food. This he deals out only at exorbitant
+prices&mdash;"a measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of
+barley for a penny." The penny, or denarius, is equal to about
+fifteen cents of our money, and was the ordinary wages of a day
+laborer. In the parable of our Lord recorded in Mat. 20, the
+householder is represented as hiring laborers for a penny a day to
+labor in his vineyard. The measure, or <i>choenix</i>, of wheat was
+the usual daily allowance of food for a man. So according to the
+rate given, it would require a day's labor to supply food
+sufficient for one man, which shows an enormous price placed upon
+these necessaries of life. In ordinary times the penny would
+procure about twenty measures of wheat instead of one, and fifty or
+sixty measures of barley instead of three. Surely this represents
+famine prices.</p>
+<p>The expression "see thou hurt not the oil and the wine" seems to
+have some direct connection with the exorbitant schedule of food
+rates. The following facts of history, as recorded by Lord, will
+serve to make the matter clear: "The taxes required in the Roman
+empire, to sustain the court and civil service, the army and
+desolating wars, and the hungry brood of office-holders, as well as
+to provide largesses to the soldiers, were excessive in the
+extreme, so as to prove an almost insupportable burden to the
+people. The ordinary and economical expenses of the government were
+great; but when we take into view that during a period of
+seventy-two years previous to Diocletian, there were twenty-six
+individuals who held the imperial crown, besides a great number of
+unsuccessful aspirants, and that each of these must secure the
+favor <span class="pagenum"><a id="page101" name="page101"></a>[pg
+101]</span> of the army and the people by large donations of money,
+we may well conceive that the taxes and exactions laid to raise the
+needed amount must have proved a crushing burden. They were so
+great as sometimes to strip men of their wealth and reduce them to
+poverty. These were laid upon everything that could be brought into
+service. Nothing was too insignificant to escape.... The taxes
+might be paid in money, or in produce, grain, fruit, oil, or
+whatever else it might be;... The exactions were so excessive that
+the people were led to avoid them in every possible mode, as men
+always will under such circumstances." Once in fifteen years, a
+Roman indiction, an assessor would go round to levy upon the
+products of the soil, and the assessment was made according to the
+amount of the yield. One method adopted to secure a lower
+assessment at this time was that of mutilating their fruit trees
+and vines. We find among the Roman laws severe enactments against
+such as "feign poverty, or cut a vine, or stint the fruit of a
+tree" in order to avoid a fair valuation, and the penalty attached
+was the death of the offender and the confiscation of all his
+property. The fact that this law existed shows that the offense was
+committed and also that the exactions of the government must have
+been of the most oppressive kind.</p>
+<p>With these facts before us it is easy to discern the nature of
+the symbol, being that of a Roman magistrate prepared to enforce
+his severe exactions upon the people at the exorbitant rate of
+three measures of wheat for a penny and three measures of barley
+for a penny, accompanied by the solemn injunction, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page102" name="page102"></a>[pg 102]</span> "See
+thou hurt not the oil and the wine," that is, the olive-trees and
+the vines.</p>
+<p>It is evident that we must, as before, go out of the department
+of civil and military life into the realm of ecclesiastical history
+to find the true fulfilment of this symbol. The black color of the
+horse would denote something directly opposite to that of the first
+seal; and since the symbol of the first seal represented the
+establishment of the pure gospel of Jesus Christ, this symbol must
+represent the great apostasy and spiritual darkness that covered
+the world at a later period. And if the horseman of the first seal
+represented the chosen ministry who went forth in a glorious
+mission to win trophies of grace, the horseman of this seal must
+represent <i>an apostate ministry</i>, possessing power and
+authority to enforce the severest exactions upon the bread of life,
+thus producing a desolating spiritual famine.</p>
+<p>This marvelous change from the humble apostolic ministry to an
+apostate one did not occur suddenly, but by degrees; and as it has
+a great bearing upon other lines of truth to be brought out in
+subsequent chapters, it will be profitable to consider the most
+important steps by which this transformation was effected.</p>
+<p>When the desire for precedence or superiority first manifested
+itself among the disciples, Christ repressed it (Mat. 20:25, 26),
+and it appeared no more in their midst; but before the close of the
+first century it is evident that a thirst for preeminence existed
+in the hearts of some who had been the servants of the church. An
+example of this is to be found in Diotrephes, who exalted himself
+above his ministerial associates. <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page103" name="page103"></a>[pg 103]</span> The Apostle John says
+concerning him: "I wrote unto the church: but Diotrephes, who
+loveth to have the preeminence among them, receiveth us not.
+Wherefore if I come, I will remember his deeds which he doeth,
+prating against us with malicious words: and not content therewith,
+neither doth he himself receive the brethren, and forbiddeth them
+that would, and casteth them out of the church." 3 John 9, 10.</p>
+<p>In the historical extracts given in the explanation of the first
+horseman, it is clear that the first ministers were all equal; but
+a time came about the close of the first century when the most
+influential among the clergy grasped the power and exalted
+themselves to a position of authority over the rest. The manner in
+which this transformation was effected is explained by the learned
+Gieseler as follows: "After the death of the apostles, and the
+pupils of the apostles, to whom the general direction of the
+churches had always been conceded, some one amongst the presbyters
+of each church was suffered gradually to take the lead in its
+affairs. In the same irregular way the title of <i>bishop</i> was
+appropriated to the first presbyter." Eccl. Hist., Vol. I, p. 65.
+In the days when the apostles were active in the affairs of the
+church there were but two classes in the ministry&mdash;elders, or
+bishops, and deacons; but when one of the presbyters was exalted to
+a higher position than the rest and assumed to himself the
+exclusive use of the word bishop, there were three classes. To
+quote the words of Geo. P. Fisher: "After we cross the limit of the
+first century we find that with each board of elders there is a
+person to whom the name of bishop is specially applied, although,
+for a long time, he is <span class="pagenum"><a id="page104" name=
+"page104"></a>[pg 104]</span> likewise often called a presbyter. In
+other words, in the room of a two-fold, we have a three-fold
+ministry." Hist. of the Christian Church, p. 51.</p>
+<p>The height to which the single bishop of authority in a church
+had been exalted is well illustrated in the Ignatian Epistles.
+Ignatius was bishop of Antioch and was condemned by the emperor
+Trajan to suffer death by being thrown to the wild beasts in the
+amphitheatre in Rome. His execution in this manner took place Dec.
+20, A.D. 107. He wrote a number of epistles, a few extracts from
+which I will give. "Wherefore it is fitting that ye should run
+together in accordance with the will of your bishop, which thing
+also ye do. For your justly renowned presbytery, worthy of God, is
+fitted as exactly to the bishop as the strings are to the harp." To
+the Ephesians, Chap. 4. "See that ye all follow the bishop, even as
+Jesus Christ does the Father.... Let no man do anything connected
+with the church without the bishop." To the Smyrnaean's, Chap. 8.
+"It is not lawful without the bishop either to baptize or to
+celebrate a love-feast; but whatsoever he shall approve of, that is
+also pleasing to God." Smyrnaean's, Chap. 8. "It is well to
+reverence both God and the bishop. He who honors the bishop has
+been honored of God; but he who does anything without the knowledge
+of the bishop, does [in reality] serve the devil." Smyrnaean's,
+Chap. 9.</p>
+<p>The power of these bishops advanced steadily during the second
+century. The churches of the cities where they were located
+extended themselves into the surrounding country and smaller towns,
+and the presbyters <span class="pagenum"><a id="page105" name=
+"page105"></a>[pg 105]</span> or elders of these inferior churches
+were presided over by the bishop of their mother church, and in
+this manner the great system of diocesan episcopacy was
+developed.<a id="footnotetag3" name="footnotetag3"></a><a href=
+"#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a></p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote3" name=
+"footnote3"></a><b>Footnote 3:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
+<p>The ancient signification of the term <i>diocese</i> must not be
+confounded with the modern usage of the term. It then designated a
+territory or district, usually containing a number of minor
+churches, presided over by one bishop.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In the latter part of the second century when the disputes
+concerning Easter and Montanism arose, the custom of diocesan
+bishops consulting with each other on important doctrines began,
+and this developed in the third century into regular provincial
+synods, or councils. On account of the ecclesiastical or political
+importance of the cities in which they were located, certain
+bishops had a special deference given them, and they were not slow
+to take advantage of the opportunity to exalt themselves to the
+presidency of these councils; and in a very short time they
+possessed immense power and constituted entirely a separate order,
+designated by the term metropolitan.</p>
+<p>The manner in which this important step in the great apostasy
+was taken and the effects produced thereby is well described in the
+words of the historian Mosheim (referring to events of the third
+century), from whom I quote: "In process of time, all the Christian
+churches of a province were formed into one large ecclesiastical
+body, which, like confederate states, assembled at certain times,
+in order to deliberate about the common interests of the whole....
+These councils ... <i>changed the whole face of the church</i>, and
+gave it a new form; for by them the ancient privileges of the
+people were considerably <span class="pagenum"><a id="page106"
+name="page106"></a>[pg 106]</span> diminished, and the power and
+authority of the bishops greatly augmented.... At their first
+appearance in these general councils, they acknowledged that they
+were no more than the delegates of their respective churches, and
+that they acted in the name, and by the appointment of their
+people. But they soon changed this humble tone, imperceptibly
+extended the limits of their authority, turned their influence into
+dominion, and their councils into laws; and openly asserted, at
+length, that Christ had empowered them to prescribe to his people,
+<i>authoritative rules of faith and manners</i>.... The order and
+decency of these assemblies required that some one of the
+provincial bishops met in council, should be invested with a
+<i>superior</i> degree of power and authority; and hence the rights
+of <i>metropolitans</i> derive their origin."&mdash;Church History,
+Cent. II, Part 2.</p>
+<p>When a usurping clergy grasps the power to prescribe
+"authoritative rules of faith and manners," to employ the words of
+Mosheim, we may well conceive that the true amount of pure
+spiritual food was exceedingly small and could be procured only at
+starvation rates. He who reads the ecclesiastical events of the
+third century will find it only too true that many of the cardinal
+virtues of apostolic Christianity were almost lost sight of and
+that a great spiritual famine existed in the earth over which this
+dark horseman of the third seal careered. Instead of salvation
+through the Spirit of God being carefully taught, baptismal
+regeneration was exalted, and the people were instructed in the
+saving virtues of the eucharist. The Platonic idea concerning sin
+having its seat in the flesh was adopted, and therefore
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page107" name="page107"></a>[pg
+107]</span> perfect victory or sanctification was made to consist
+in the mortification of the natural appetites and desires of the
+body, with the result that a life of fasting, celibacy, or
+self-inflicted torture was looked upon as the surest means of
+obtaining the favor of Heaven. The writings of such eminent church
+Fathers as Tertullian, Origen, Cyprian and others now lying before
+me, contain the surest evidences of the woeful extent to which this
+dark cloud of superstition and error had settled down over the
+world during the period of which I write.</p>
+<a name="chap6-7" id="chap6-7"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>7. And when he had opened the fourth seal, I heard the voice of
+the fourth beast say, Come and see.</p>
+<p>8. And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that sat
+on him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was given
+unto them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with sword,
+and with hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of the
+earth.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The usual interpretation given this horse and its rider is to
+apply it to the desolating wars and famines that occurred in the
+Roman Empire. This view is embodied in the celebrated painting
+"Death on the Pale Horse," in which death is represented as going
+forth with war, pestilence, famine, and wild beasts, to ravage the
+Roman empire. We are informed by historians that dreadful
+pestilences and famines did prevail and in some places nearly
+depopulated the country, and that the remaining inhabitants could
+not make head against the beasts that multiplied in the land. But
+the fact that such events occurred is <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page108" name="page108"></a>[pg 108]</span> not sufficient proof
+that this symbol has reference to such. Famines and pestilences may
+have occurred many times without forming a part of the Apocalyptic
+vision.</p>
+<p>The greatest objection to giving this part of the vision such a
+literal interpretation is, that it fails to bring out its symbolic
+character. To what, then, does it refer? We have, as before, a
+horseman, indicating that the agent is one of the same general
+character, differing mainly in his features and mission. This horse
+was of a livid, cadaverous hue, denoting an agent of ghastly,
+terrible nature. The living rider bore the awful name of "Death,"
+or as in the original, "The Death," by way of emphasis. Death
+literally was not the agent&mdash;it is not so stated&mdash;but the
+rider was termed The Death, or The Destroyer, because of his
+terrible mission; and Hell followed with him.</p>
+<p>Applying the laws of symbolic language as heretofore, it is
+evident that this symbol represents a great persecuting
+ecclesiastical power. And with this thought before us, we can
+scarcely fail to recognize it as a true description of <i>the
+Papacy</i>. The great apostasy, described under the preceding seal,
+prepared the way for the final and complete establishment of the
+"man of sin"; but during the period there brought to view the
+ministers of religion, power-seeking and apostate as they were,
+were unable to enforce their claims by the power of persecution.
+Under the present seal, however, is represented a later stage of
+their corruption, when a great hierarchal system, sustained and
+upheld by the arm of civil power, was able to bear tyrannical rule
+over a <span class="pagenum"><a id="page109" name="page109"></a>[pg
+109]</span> great portion of the earth. During this period clerical
+ambition and usurpation reached its greatest height.</p>
+<p>After speaking of the power possessed by the metropolitans,
+Mosheim says: "The universal church had now the appearance of one
+vast republic, formed by a combination of a great number of little
+states. This occasioned the creation of a new order of
+ecclesiastics, who were appointed in different parts of the world,
+as <i>heads</i> of the church, and whose office it was to preserve
+the consistence and union of that immense body, whose members were
+so widely dispersed throughout the nations. Such was the nature and
+office of the Patriarchs." Church History, Cent. II, part 2.</p>
+<p>Thus, the bishops, or metropolitans, of certain of the most
+important cities were exalted to a still higher position as special
+<i>heads</i> of the church. They were termed <i>Exarchs</i> at
+first, after the title of the provincial governors, but afterwards
+received the more ecclesiastical appellation <i>Patriarchs</i>. The
+term Patriarch had been in use for a long time in the church
+signifying merely a bishop, irrespective of the dignity he
+possessed, but it was finally limited to this higher class of the
+clergy, in which sense I now employ it. The cities that first
+enjoyed this chief distinction were Alexandria, Rome, and Antioch.
+The general council of Nice (A.D. 325) in its sixth canon
+recognized the superior authority already possessed by these
+cities. See D'Aubigne's Hist, of Reformation, Vol. I, p. 41. The
+general council of Constantinople in its third canon placed the
+bishop of Constantinople in the same rank with the other three
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page110" name="page110"></a>[pg
+110]</span> Patriarchs; and the general council of Calcedon exalted
+the See of Jerusalem to a similar dignity, doubtless because of its
+ancient importance as the birthplace of Christianity. Thus,
+Patriarchs were established in the five political capitals of the
+Roman empire; and they were considered the "<i>heads of the
+church</i>," having spiritual authority over the whole empire.
+These were the only Patriarchates of importance. Certain
+ecclesiastics of the Church of Rome even at the present time bear
+the honorary title Patriarch; but, to quote the words of the
+Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica, "In a strictly technical sense,
+however, that church recognizes only five Patriarchates, those of
+Constantinople, Alexandria, Jerusalem, Antioch, and Rome." Art.
+Patriarch. In the years 637 to 640 Jerusalem, Alexandria, and
+Antioch fell into the hands of the Saracen followers of Mohammed,
+which terminated their importance, and later the Greek schism
+separated the Patriarch of Constantinople from Rome; and thus the
+Patriarch of Rome was left in undisputed possession of the field
+and was soon recognized as universal head of the church. So under
+the symbol of this dread rider on a pale horse is portrayed the
+great hierarchal system by which the Papacy was fully developed in
+the West.</p>
+<p>It is fitting that we notice particularly the agents of
+destruction employed by this rider. He possesses a sword with which
+to kill&mdash;the same instrument wielded by the rider of the red
+horse&mdash;but it is evident that he uses it with more terrific
+energy, by reason of which he receives the name Death, or The
+Destroyer. It is possible, also, that in this case a <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page111" name="page111"></a>[pg 111]</span> sword,
+wielded by the hand of an ecclesiastical power, may be used as a
+symbol of a spiritual cutting off, or excommunication. The sword of
+excommunication has been the most terrible ever wielded by human
+hand. When this pale horseman was careering over the world in the
+zenith of his power, excommunication and interdiction were the
+terror of individuals and the scourge of nations. At his word the
+rights of an individual as king, ruler, husband or father, nay,
+even as a <i>man</i>, were forfeited, and he was shunned like one
+infected with the leprosy. At his command the offices of religion
+were suspended in a nation, and its dead lay unburied, until its
+proud ruler humbled himself at the feet of the ecclesiastical
+tyrant who bore rule over the "fourth part of the earth."<a id=
+"footnotetag4" name="footnotetag4"></a><a href=
+"#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a></p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote4" name=
+"footnote4"></a><b>Footnote 4:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
+<p>This tyranny of the Popes is well illustrated by the quarrel
+that took place between Hildebrand (Pope Gregory VII.) and Henry
+IV. of Germany. Gregory attempted to make certain reforms, but
+Henry refused to recognize those innovations. Gregory
+excommunicated the emperor, with the result that he was "shunned as
+a man accursed by Heaven." His authority lost and his kingdom on
+the point of going to pieces, Henry had but one thing to
+do&mdash;seek the pardon of the Pope. He found the Pontiff at
+Canoosa, but Gregory refused to admit the penitent to his presence.
+"It was winter, and for three successive days the king, clothed in
+sackcloth, stood with bare feet in the snow of the court-yard of
+the palace, waiting for permission to kneel at the feet of the
+Pontiff and to receive forgiveness." On the fourth day he was
+granted admittance to the presence of the Pope.</p>
+<p>During the Pontificate of Innocent III. Philip Augustus, king of
+France, put away his wife. Innocent commanded him to take her back
+and forced submission by means of an interdict. This submission of
+a brave, firm, and victorious prince shows the tremendous power
+wielded by the Popes in that period.</p>
+<p>The manner, also, in which Innocent III. humbled King John of
+England affords another illustration of the power of the Popes.
+John caused the vacant See of Canterbury to be filled, in
+accordance with the regular manner of election, by one of his
+favorites. Innocent declared the appointment void, as he desired
+that the place should be filled by one of his friends. John refused
+to allow the Pope's archbishop to enter England as Primate.
+Innocent then excommunicated John, laid all England under an
+interdict, and incited Philip, king of France, to war, offering him
+John's kingdom upon the very liberal condition that he go over and
+take it. The outcome of the matter was that John was compelled to
+yield to the power of the Pope. He even gave him England as a
+perpetual fief, and agreed to pay the Papal See the annual sum of
+one thousand marks.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The loss of life by spiritual famine was extreme. The Word of
+God, which is spirit and life to God's <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page112" name="page112"></a>[pg 112]</span> people (Jno. 6:63),
+was laid under interdict and the common people deprived of its
+benefits. At the time the black horse appeared, a little food could
+be obtained at famine prices; but when the fourth arrived, he was
+empowered to kill "with hunger." Also, one of his agents of
+destruction was death, or pestilence, a fit symbol of false and
+blasphemous doctrines breathed forth like a deadly pestilence
+blasting everything within its reach. Invocation of saints, worship
+of images, relics, celibacy, works of supererogation, indulgences,
+and purgatory&mdash;these were the enforced principles of religion,
+and like a pest they settled down upon the people everywhere.</p>
+<p>This rider also brought into operation "the beasts of the earth"
+to aid him in his destructive work. To kill with sword or hunger
+shows that such work of destruction is performed solely by him who
+has it in his power; but to kill with beasts indicates that
+<i>they</i> perform the deadly work according <i>to their own
+natures</i>. Nothing is clearer than the fact that wild beasts
+stand as a symbol of persecuting tyrannical governments; hence we
+are to understand that this <span class="pagenum"><a id="page113"
+name="page113"></a>[pg 113]</span> rider was to employ also the arm
+of civil power to aid him in the deadly work. How strikingly this
+represents the historical facts of the case! In all truly Roman
+Catholic countries the civil governments were only a cipher or tool
+in the hands of the church, and the ecclesiastics were the real
+rulers of the kingdom. But whenever any dark work of persecution
+was to be performed, the wild beast was let loose to accomplish the
+result. When charged, however, with the bloody work, the Catholics
+always answer, "Oh, we <i>never persecute</i>&mdash;don't you see,
+it is the wild beasts that are covered with gore&mdash;our hands
+are clean," yet they themselves held the chain that bound the
+savage monsters. We shall have occasion in a subsequent chapter to
+trace further the pathway of this dread rider as he reels onward in
+the career of ages, "drunken with the blood of the saints."</p>
+<p>This work of destruction performed by the dread rider on the
+pale horse is considered by many as a literal description of the
+persecutions of the Papacy. While Catholics usually charge the
+civil powers with this bloody work, it is an undeniable fact of
+history that the Popes often ordered or sanctioned crusades against
+the Waldenses, Albigenses, and other peoples (see remarks on verses
+<a href="#chap6-9">9-11</a>, chap. <a href="#chap17-6">17:6</a>),
+in which the sword, starvation, and every other means of cruelty
+imaginable were brought into use to exterminate the so-called
+heresy. And in view of the fact explained in the comments on verses
+<a href="#chap6-3">3 and 4</a> of this chapter, that <i>killing</i>
+is sometimes to be understood in a literal sense on account of
+there being nothing to analagously represent such destruction of
+life, it is not a violation of the laws of symbolic language thus
+to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page114" name="page114"></a>[pg
+114]</span> interpret it. It might be consistent in this case to
+give it a twofold application; the agreeing facts of history
+regarding the Papacy strongly suggest it. Thus, the <i>sword</i>
+could signify a literal destruction of life, as in verse 4, and
+also, in the present case, an ecclesiastical cutting off by the
+Papacy, or excommunication; and <i>hunger</i> could signify literal
+death by starvation, and also, as in verses 5 and 6, a destruction
+of spiritual life, etc.</p>
+<p>Where, let me ask, in the whole compass of human writings can be
+found a series of events of such thrilling interest, so great in
+magnitude, as is contained in these eight verses? Who but the
+Omnipotent could have conceived such a wonderful development of the
+power of iniquity and with such master-strokes of power compressed
+them into so small a scene of symbolic imagery? The impress of
+divinity is here speaking from every line.</p>
+<a name="chap6-9" id="chap6-9"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>9. And when he had opened the fifth seal, I saw under the altar
+the souls of them that were slain for the word of God, and for the
+testimony which they held:</p>
+<a name="chap6-10" id="chap6-10"></a>
+<p>10. And they cried with a loud voice, saying, How long, O Lord,
+holy and true, dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them
+that dwell on the earth?</p>
+<a name="chap6-11" id="chap6-11"></a>
+<p>11. And white robes were given unto every one of them; and it
+was said unto them, that they should rest yet for a little season,
+until their fellowservants also and their brethren, that should be
+killed as they were, should be fulfilled.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Upon the opening of this seal the scene changes entirely. No
+more horsemen appear, but instead <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page115" name="page115"></a>[pg 115]</span> the souls of the
+martyrs are seen at the altar crying for vindication of their blood
+upon the cruel oppressors of earth. The question arises, Are these
+souls symbols of something else, or are they what they are here
+stated to be, "the souls of them that were slain"? Evidently, the
+latter, appearing under their own name and character, because they
+can not properly be symbolized. They were disembodied spirits, and
+where is there anything of analagous character to represent such?
+Angels can not; for whenever they are employed as symbols, it is to
+designate distinguished agencies among men. They therefore appear
+under their own appropriate title as "the <i>souls</i> of them that
+were slain."</p>
+<p>These souls appeared "under the altar," that is, <i>at the foot
+of the altar</i>, being the same as that described in chap.
+<a href="#chap8-3">8:3</a>&mdash;"And another angel came and stood
+at the altar, having a golden censer, and there was given unto him
+much incense, that he should offer it with the prayers of all
+saints upon the golden altar which was before the throne." Thus,
+the heavenly world, as opened up before John, appeared symbolized
+after the sanctuary of the temple in which stood the golden altar,
+or altar of incense. Some have supposed that the brazen altar was
+the one referred to, signifying the living sacrifice these souls
+made of themselves to God. But there is no altar mentioned in the
+symbols except the golden altar. Besides, these were not
+sacrificial victims; for Christ was made a complete sacrifice for
+sin, while these only suffered martyrdom because of their
+faithfulness to the cause of Christ. It is much more reasonable to
+suppose that their interceding cries went up from the golden altar,
+where <span class="pagenum"><a id="page116" name="page116"></a>[pg
+116]</span> the "prayers of all saints" ascended with much
+incense.</p>
+<p>Their prayers to God for the avenging of their blood shows the
+expectation on their part that the judgments of Heaven would
+descend upon the cruel and haughty persecutors and oppressors of
+earth, and their surprise was that the day of retribution had been
+so long delayed. The history of the church as developed under the
+preceding seals gives particular force to this cry of the martyrs.
+For nearly three centuries the civil power of Pagan Rome had been
+employed to crush the cause of God. During ten terrible seasons of
+persecution they had been crucified, slain with the sword, sawn
+asunder, devoured by beasts in the arena, and given to the flames.
+When Constantine, a nominal Christian emperor, ascended the throne
+and protected religion by law, it was believed that persecutions
+must cease; but soon the discovery was made that the sword had only
+changed hands, there having risen an ecclesiastical hierarchy
+destined to "glut itself upon the blood of which heathen Rome had
+only tasted." The world was now made the arena for the terrible
+coursings of the pale horseman, and the "beasts of the earth" were
+let loose to fall with savage fury upon their helpless victims,
+until millions lost their lives at the instigation of the apostate
+Church of Rome. Is it any wonder that the souls of these martyrs
+should cry unto God for the vindication of their righteous
+blood?</p>
+<p>It is said that "white robes were given unto every one of them."
+By referring to chap. <a href="#chap3-4">3:4</a>; <a href=
+"#chap7-9">7:9</a>, <a href="#chap7-13">13, 14</a>, it will be seen
+that "white garments" and "white robes" are sometimes used as a
+symbol to describe <span class="pagenum"><a id="page117" name=
+"page117"></a>[pg 117]</span> a part of the heavenly inheritance.
+The martyr-spirits, although impatient at the delay of avenging
+judgment, received a righteous reward. But the period of
+tribulation to the church was not yet over. The cup of iniquity in
+the hands of her enemies was not yet full, and they were told to
+"rest for a little season, until their fellowservants also, and
+their brethren, that should be killed as they were, should be
+fulfilled." The account given seems to indicate an important epoch,
+a period in which the martyrs had reason to expect the vindication
+of their righteous blood, but which, instead, was to be followed by
+another great period of persecution. Considering the time of the
+events already described in this series of prophecy, we have no
+difficulty in fixing the chronology of this event at the
+dividing-point between the era of Papal supremacy and the age of
+Protestantism&mdash;or at the Reformation of the Sixteenth Century.
+Did severe slaughter and persecution follow the Reformation?
+Witness the reign of Mary Tudor, frequently styled "Bloody Mary."
+During three years of her reign, 1555 to 1558, two hundred and
+eighty-eight were <i>burnt alive</i> in England! Think of the
+inhuman massacre of the innocent Waldenses of southern France by
+the violent bigot Oppede (1545), who slew eight hundred men in one
+town, and thrust the women into a barn filled with straw and
+reduced the whole to ashes&mdash;only a sample of his barbarity; or
+of their oppression in southern Italy by Pope Pius IV. (1560), at
+whose command they were slain by thousands, the throats of
+eighty-eight men being cut on one occasion by a single executioner!
+Witness the horrible massacre of St. Bartholomew in Paris (Aug.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page118" name="page118"></a>[pg
+118]</span> 21, 1572), when the Queen dowager, the infamous
+Catherine de Medici, lured immense numbers of the innocent Hugenots
+into the city under the pretext of witnessing a marriage between
+the Hugenot Henry, king of Navarre, and the sister of Charles IX.,
+king of France&mdash;when the gates were closed and the work of
+wholesale slaughter began at a given signal and raged for three
+days, during which time from six to ten thousand were butchered in
+Paris alone! Think of the rivers of blood in the Netherlands, where
+the Duke of Alva boasted that in the short space of six weeks he
+had put eighteen thousand to death! Witness the dragoonading
+methods and other inhuman persecutions to "wear out the saints of
+the Most High," that followed the revocation of the Edict of Nantes
+(1685) by Louis XIV., king of France, during whose reign three
+hundred thousand were brutally butchered&mdash;while Pope Innocent
+XI. extolled the king by special letter as follows: "The Catholic
+church shall most assuredly record in her sacred annals a <i>work
+of such devotion toward her</i>, and CELEBRATE YOUR NAME WITH
+NEVER-DYING PRAISES ... for <i>this most excellent
+undertaking</i>"!! My heart sickens with horror in the
+contemplation of such events. Eternal God! can thy righteous eye
+behold such heart-rending scenes of earth, and thy hand of power
+not be extended to humble to the dust these cruel, haughty
+oppressors of thy people?</p>
+<a name="chap6-12" id="chap6-12"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>12. And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal, and, lo,
+there was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as sackcloth
+of hair, and the moon became as blood;</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page119" name="page119"></a>[pg
+119]</span>
+<p>13. And the stars of heaven fell unto the earth, even as a
+fig-tree casteth her untimely figs, when she is shaken of a mighty
+wind.</p>
+<p>14. And the heaven departed as a scroll when it is rolled
+together; and every mountain and island were moved out of their
+places.</p>
+<p>15. And the kings of the earth, and the great men, and the rich
+men, and the chief captains, and the mighty men, and every bondman,
+and every free man, hid themselves in the dens and in the rocks of
+the mountains;</p>
+<a name="chap6-16" id="chap6-16"></a>
+<p>16. And said to the mountains and rocks, Fall on us, and hide us
+from the face of him that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath
+of the Lamb;</p>
+<p>17. For the great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be
+able to stand?</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Upon the opening of this seal the scene changes again. The
+symbols are all drawn from an entirely different source. We are
+taken out of the department of civil life into the scenes of
+nature, which is a clear evidence that the history of the church is
+no longer under consideration. Had God intended to here continue
+her history, he would no doubt have employed symbols derived from
+the same source as those preceding, so as to prevent our being led
+astray. No more horsemen or living characters appear, but we behold
+the most terrific convulsions of nature&mdash;a mighty earthquake,
+the darkening of the sun and the moon, the falling of the stars,
+and finally the dissolution of the heavens, together with the
+mountains and the islands being removed. If the history of the
+church is no longer under consideration, this great change of
+symbols directs us with absolute certainty <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page120" name="page120"></a>[pg 120]</span> into
+the political and civil world for their fulfilment. Of course, we
+are not to suppose that this is a literal description.</p>
+<p>In this manner the dignity and the excellence in the use and the
+interpretation of symbols is preserved. To describe the religious
+history of the church, noble symbols chosen from the department of
+human life are selected; while symbols drawn from an inferior
+department&mdash;that of nature&mdash;are chosen to represent
+political affairs. This point will appear very clear as we proceed
+in the interpretation of the Apocalypse. It is just what we might
+naturally expect.</p>
+<p>The question may be asked, If these symbols from nature
+represent political affairs, where in the events of civil history
+shall we look for their fulfilment? Every one will readily perceive
+the analogy between an earthquake and a political revolution, when
+all society is in a state of agitation as when the solid earth
+trembles. It is also evident that the sun, moon, and stars bear the
+same analagous relationship to the earth that kings, rulers, and
+princes do to the body politic; while the firmament of heaven is
+analagous to the entire fabric of civil government, the symbolic
+heaven in which the symbolic orbs are set to give light.</p>
+<p>The symbols, then, point us to the most terrible
+revolutions&mdash;when society is in a state of agitation, when
+kingdoms are overthrown and their rulers and princes thrown from
+their positions or made objects of the most gloomy terror; yea,
+when the entire fabric of civil government is finally overthrown
+and all the institutions and organizations of society are
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page121" name="page121"></a>[pg
+121]</span> swept away as with a tornado. This is the time of
+consternation to the great men of earth, when they shall hide
+"themselves in the dens and in the rocks of the mountains," and say
+to the mountains and rocks, "Fall on us and hide us from the face
+of him that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb:
+for the great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be able to
+stand?" This is the time that the martyrs looked forward to when
+they cried, "How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge
+and avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth?" A large
+portion of the Apocalypse is occupied with the history of these
+persecuting powers, civil and ecclesiastical. It is their dominacy
+that constitutes the long period of tribulation to the church, when
+the witnesses prophesy in sackcloth and the faithful are ground
+into the dust by the feet of these proud oppressors as they stand
+in the high places of the earth. But the cries of the slaughtered
+saints have ascended to the throne as incense; God speaks; the
+judgments of Heaven descend upon these lofty ones; and a voice from
+heaven declares, "They have shed the blood of saints and prophets,
+and <i>thou hast given them blood to drink</i>; for they are
+worthy."</p>
+<p>This is surely a striking combination of symbols, and the way
+they are arranged would indicate that their fulfilment occupied a
+considerable period of time. First we have a great earthquake,
+afterwards the darkening of the sun and the moon, with the falling
+of the stars, and finally the dissolution of the heavens
+themselves, with the sweeping away of mountains and islands. This
+description covers the same period as that described under the
+seven last plagues, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page122" name=
+"page122"></a>[pg 122]</span> beginning with certain fearful
+revolutions in which the nations that had slaughtered the millions
+of God's people were given "blood to drink," and ending finally in
+"the great day of his wrath" that shall sweep them from their
+positions eternally. The full explanation of these events can not
+at present be appreciated by the reader, therefore I reserve it for
+the future, to be more fully developed under other symbols.</p>
+<p>In these six seals we have a vivid outline of mighty events,
+political and ecclesiastical, extending from the earliest stage of
+Christianity to the end of time. This description in advance was no
+mere human production. No human foresight would have detected, and
+no mortal mind would have conceived, events so wonderful and so
+farreaching in their character. Any other history would sooner have
+been imagined. It takes divine wisdom to understand the true
+position of the church in the present, and she can scarcely read
+her past history by natural wisdom alone, much less outline the
+future. First the establishment of Christianity is symbolized, then
+the violence of the Pagan party, the apostasy, and final
+establishment of the "man of sin," until the millions of earth are
+crushed by the spiritual tyranny or by the arm of civil power, and
+the cry of the martyrs goes up "How long, O Lord?" But they are
+told to rest "a little season," when they shall witness the hand of
+God laid upon these persecuting nations of earth, convulsing them
+in the most fearful revolutions, and ending finally in their
+complete overthrow in that last "great day of God Almighty."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page123" name="page123"></a>[pg
+123]</span> <a name="chap7" id="chap7"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+<a name="chap7-1" id="chap7-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And after these things I saw four angels standing on the four
+corners of the earth, holding the four winds of the earth, that the
+wind should not blow on the earth, nor on the sea, nor on any
+tree.</p>
+<p>2. And I saw another angel ascending from the east, having the
+seal of the living God: and he cried with a loud voice to the four
+angels, to whom it was given to hurt the earth and the sea.</p>
+<p>3. Saying, Hurt not the earth, neither the sea, nor the trees,
+till we have sealed the servants of our God in their foreheads.</p>
+<p>4. And I heard the number of them which were sealed: and there
+were sealed an hundred and forty and four thousand of all the
+tribes of the children of Israel.</p>
+<p>5. Of the tribe of Juda were sealed twelve thousand. Of the
+tribe of Reuben were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Gad
+were sealed twelve thousand.</p>
+<p>6. Of the tribe of Aser were sealed twelve thousand. Of the
+tribe of Nepthalim were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of
+Manasses were sealed twelve thousand.</p>
+<p>7. Of the tribe of Simeon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the
+tribe of Levi were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Issachar
+were sealed twelve thousand.</p>
+<p>8. Of the tribe of Zabulon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the
+tribe of Joseph were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of
+Benjamin were sealed twelve thousand.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page124" name="page124"></a>[pg
+124]</span>
+<p>A clear understanding of the two visions in the chapter before
+us can be obtained only by considering the plan of the prophecy
+already referred to. The events are narrated by series. A
+particular theme is taken up and followed through to its
+completion; then the narrative returns and another theme is
+introduced. But this is not all. Whenever the history of abounding
+error or iniquity is set forth, we have in immediate connection and
+in perfect contrast therewith a history of the true people of God;
+thus, the contemporaneous history of righteousness and iniquity,
+truth and error, a true church and a false one. The visions of this
+chapter cover the same period of time as the events described in
+the preceding chapter, but form the most perfect contrast. The
+student of Revelation who unfolds the dark history of apostasy and
+iniquity contained in the preceding seals might naturally be led to
+ask, Is this the melancholy end of God's church? Does it
+deteriorate rapidly and turn out so badly, after all? As an answer
+to these questions, God gives us next a history of his own people,
+showing that he preserved his own church complete, although
+Antichrist reigned in power.</p>
+<p>The principal points in the vision before us are the tempestuous
+winds about to descend upon the earth, and the sealing of God's
+servants. The first of these, being drawn from nature, would lead
+us to look for its fulfilment in political events; while the
+latter, derived from human life, directs us into the affairs of the
+church. The "four winds of the earth" from the "four corners of the
+earth" signify all the winds from every direction&mdash;the
+cardinal points of the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page125" name=
+"page125"></a>[pg 125]</span> compass; while the four angels
+signify all the agencies that have control of these winds, which
+for the present are held in restraint in order to give opportunity
+for the sealing of the Lord's servants. <i>Angels</i> in the
+Scripture is frequently used to denote evil agencies as well as
+good, the context determining which is meant. See Chap. <a href=
+"#chap12-7">12:7</a>. The design of the winds was to "hurt the
+earth, the sea, and the trees."</p>
+<p>What, let me ask, in the political world is analagous to
+tempestuous storms sweeping over the earth? What but huge masses of
+men, excited by fierce passions, precipitating themselves upon the
+inhabitants of an empire, sweeping everything before them in the
+fury of their march and spreading desolation on every side? In the
+symbols of the next chapter we find that just such hordes of
+men&mdash;barbarians&mdash;under their angels, or leaders,
+precipitated themselves upon the Roman empire; and the fearful
+effects upon the earth, the sea, and the green trees produced
+thereby, is particularly detailed. For the present, however, they
+are held under restraint until the sealing of the servants of God
+should be accomplished, then they were to go forward in their work
+of destruction.</p>
+<p>The sealing of the servants is not making them the people of
+God, but rather marking or designating them as such, just as later
+we find the devotees of a corrupt apostate church specified as
+having the "mark of the beast." Considerable light can be thrown
+upon the subject of the sealing of God's servants and of the mark
+of the beast by consulting Roman history for the origin of such
+expressions. The many conquests of the Roman arms furnished so many
+prisoners that they became a drug in the slave-markets <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page126" name="page126"></a>[pg 126]</span> of the
+world, and were so numerous that in many places they outnumbered
+the Roman citizens ten to one. In the first century before Christ
+it is said that some Sicilian estates were worked by as many as
+twenty thousand slaves. "That each owner might know his own, the
+poor creatures were <i>branded like cattle</i>." The "mark of the
+beast" possessed by the followers of a false communion will be
+found to consist of an Antichristian spirit by which they are
+filled with "doctrines of devils." So, also, "the seal of the
+living God" consists of the giving of the Holy Spirit, by which his
+people are led into all truth. See John 14:26. While Sabbatarians
+vainly try to prove that keeping the seventh day is the seal of God
+in this dispensation, yet there is not one text of Scripture that
+hints such a thing, but, on the contrary, the Scriptures are
+against them. "Grieve not the <i>Holy Spirit</i> of God whereby
+<i>ye are sealed</i> unto the day of redemption." Eph. 4:30. Again,
+the Word of God says, "Now he which stablished us with you in
+Christ, and hath anointed us is God; who hath also sealed us, and
+given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts." 2 Cor. 1:21, 22.
+The time this sealing of the people of God takes place is thus
+described: "<i>After</i> that ye believed, ye were <i>sealed</i>
+with that Holy Spirit of promise." Eph. 1:13. The winds of heaven
+were restrained until the work of <i>full salvation</i> could be
+firmly established in the earth. When Christ appeared, the Roman
+empire was in a state of comparative quiet, and the immense hosts
+of foreign invaders did not appear until the firm establishment of
+Christianity, being held back by the power of God until his work
+should be accomplished.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page127" name="page127"></a>[pg
+127]</span>
+<p>In the description of the sealing given, twelve thousand were
+selected from each of the twelve tribes. Some have supposed this to
+have reference solely to salvation work among the Jewish nation;
+but that would be adopting the literal mode of interpretation, thus
+destroying its symbolic character. The twelve tribes are chosen
+from the proper department to represent the church or "Israel of
+God" in this dispensation, irrespective of nationality. The twelve
+gates in the wall of the heavenly city are named after the twelve
+tribes of the children of Israel (chap. <a href=
+"#chap21-12">21:12</a>), showing that it is only through "Israel"
+that any one can enter the New Jerusalem. Since the gospel is given
+to all nations, this can not signify literal Israel. "The children
+of the promise are counted for the seed." Rom. 9:8. "If ye be
+Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the
+promise." Gal. 3:29. Since the vision is symbolical, we are to
+consider the numbers given as symbolical also, the definite number
+of twelve thousand from each of the tribes showing that the church
+of God was <i>complete and perfect</i>, no part being omitted.</p>
+<a name="chap7-9" id="chap7-9"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>9. After this I beheld, and, lo, a great multitude, which no man
+could number, of all nations, and kindreds, and people, and
+tongues, stood before the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed with
+white robes, and palms in their hands;</p>
+<p>10. And cried with a loud voice, saying, Salvation to our God
+which sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb.</p>
+<p>11. And all the angels stood round about the throne, and about
+the elders and the four beasts, <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page128" name="page128"></a>[pg 128]</span> and fell before the
+throne on their faces, and worshipped God,</p>
+<p>12. Saying, Amen: Blessing, and glory, and wisdom, and
+thanksgiving, and honor, and power, and might, be unto our God for
+ever and ever. Amen.</p>
+<a name="chap7-13" id="chap7-13"></a>
+<p>13. And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, What are
+these which are arrayed in white robes? and whence came they?</p>
+<p>14. And I said unto him, Sir, thou knowest. And he said to me,
+These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed
+their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.</p>
+<p>15. Therefore are they before the throne of God, and serve him
+day and night in his temple: and he that sitteth on the throne
+shall dwell among them.</p>
+<a name="chap7-16" id="chap7-16"></a>
+<p>16. They shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; neither
+shall the sun light on them, nor any heat.</p>
+<p>17. For the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed
+them, and shall lead them unto living mountains of waters: and God
+shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In this scene the vision is carried forward to the close of the
+long period of tribulation and persecution to the church of God,
+when all her enemies are finally overthrown; and here are the
+glorious results, the harvest gathered: a great multitude whom no
+man can number, gathered out of all nations, and kindreds, and
+peoples, and tongues, standing before the throne and before the
+Lamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands, the
+symbols of their victory. The scene is laid in heaven, and refers
+undoubtedly to the end of time when the heavenly world will be
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page129" name="page129"></a>[pg
+129]</span> opened up to all the faithful who have suffered for
+Christ amid the trials and the oppositions through which his church
+is called to pass in this present world. We are expressly informed
+by one of the elders who these are in white robes and whence they
+came, so there can be no question respecting them. This is the
+glorious company of the redeemed of all ages who "came out of great
+tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white in
+the blood of the Lamb. Therefore they are before the throne of God,
+and serve him day and night in his temple; and he that sitteth on
+the throne shall dwell among them. They shall hunger no more,
+neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun light on them, nor
+any heat." What a contrast with the scenes of earth, when oppressed
+by famine, and cold, and nakedness, and peril, and sword, they were
+killed all the day long! But their sufferings are over; "for the
+Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and shall
+lead them unto living fountains of waters and God shall wipe away
+all tears from their eyes."</p>
+<p>This redeemed company is represented as uniting in a song of
+praise and thanksgiving to God for bringing them through their long
+period of trial, "saying Salvation to our God which sitteth upon
+the throne, and unto the Lamb"; while heaven resounds with
+universal praise as the angels and all the redeemed host take up
+the chorus and swell the mighty anthem "saying, Amen; blessing, and
+glory, and wisdom and thanksgiving, and honor, and power, and might
+be unto our God forever and ever. Amen."</p>
+<p>It is clear that, in this chapter and the one preceding, we have
+two grand parallel and comprehensive <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page130" name="page130"></a>[pg 130]</span> histories&mdash;in
+one, the process of corruption in the so-called church and the
+final judgments that overtook these cruel persecutors of the Lord's
+people; in the other, the setting apart and sealing of God's
+servants, their preservation from the contaminations of an apostate
+church, and the final glorious triumph of all who endure unto the
+end.</p>
+<p>This vision has often been applied in a figurative manner to the
+spiritual reign of God's people on earth before the end of
+time&mdash;that they are overcomers through the blood of Christ,
+that God dwells with them in his church, that their spiritual needs
+are all supplied so they hunger and thirst no more&mdash;but a
+careful study of the plan of the prophecy will show that its real
+signification is the heavenly state at the end. As the sixth seal
+describes the final overthrow of all the antichristian powers that
+have oppressed God's people on earth; so this vision describes the
+great white-robed company gathered out of every nation, kindred,
+tongue, and people, who have been preserved faithful through all
+these trials and tribulations, and who receive at last the crown of
+everlasting life. This last vision will be more fully described
+under certain symbols contained in the last two chapters of this
+book; while the earthquake, the falling of the stars, etc., of the
+sixth seal will be more perfectly detailed in chapters <a href=
+"#chap15">15</a> and <a href="#chap16">16</a>.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page131" name="page131"></a>[pg
+131]</span> <a name="chap8" id="chap8"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+<a name="chap8-1" id="chap8-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And when he had opened the seventh seal, there was silence in
+heaven about the space of half an hour.</p>
+<p>2. And I saw the seven angels which stood before God; and to
+them were given seven trumpets.</p>
+<a name="chap8-3" id="chap8-3"></a>
+<p>3. And another angel came and stood at the altar, having a
+golden censer; and there was given unto him much incense, that he
+should offer it with the prayers of all saints upon the golden
+altar which was before the throne.</p>
+<p>4. And the smoke of the incense, which came with the prayers of
+the saints, ascended up before God out of the angel's hand.</p>
+<p>5. And the angel took the censer, and filled it with fire of the
+altar, and cast it into the earth: and there were voices, and
+thunderings, and lightnings, and an earthquake.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The remainder of the book is embraced in the contents of the
+seventh seal. This may appear a little singular at first, being so
+much larger than the preceding ones. But it is easily understood
+when we consider the six as being a synopsis of the whole book,
+containing a history of the church apostate to the final
+consummation, and also the contemporaneous history of the truth
+church of God; while the seventh gives in detail the account of
+these great persecuting powers, civil and ecclesiastical, and the
+trials and triumphs of the saints in the New
+Jerusalem&mdash;developing more fully the events described under
+the six.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page132" name="page132"></a>[pg
+132]</span>
+<p>Upon the opening of the seventh seal, "there was silence in
+heaven about the space of half an hour." Whether this interval of
+silence is intended to be symbolical of any event on earth I do not
+know; neither have I seen any solution of the matter that is
+consistent or satisfactory. Some have supposed that it denoted a
+cessation of persecution among the Christians of earth. But if that
+were the case, then its opposite, "voices in heaven," would
+indicate seasons of persecution. There were several seasons of rest
+from persecution enjoyed by the early saints, and why should one
+period be singled out more than the rest and be thus described?
+Besides, "a half hour," according to prophetic time would signify
+only about one week, a period too short certainly to take account
+of. Others have supposed that it signified the end of the world,
+and that heaven would then be deserted for a short time while the
+judgment was taking place. But the events following show that the
+end of the world is not here described, therefore it can not have
+reference to such. Moreover, it is extremely doubtful whether
+silence in heaven would be a proper symbol of such an event. I do
+not perceive the analogy. In fact, such an interpretation of
+<i>silence</i> would be literal and not symbolic.</p>
+<p>Its explanation would seem to be found in connection with
+certain facts stated respecting the opening of the preceding
+seals&mdash;that voices followed them. When the first four seals
+were opened, John heard the voices of the four beasts, "as it were
+a voice of thunder"; and on the opening of the fifth, he heard the
+souls of the martyrs crying unto God; but when the seventh was
+opened, there was silence for a time. <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page133" name="page133"></a>[pg 133]</span> The contrast is
+noticeable; but whether it has any special signification, I am
+unable to say; perhaps not.</p>
+<p>Before the sounding of the seven trumpets, the acceptableness of
+the prayers of the saints is represented by an angel offering
+incense "upon the golden altar which was before the throne." This
+scene was doubtless introduced to lend encouragement to God's
+children&mdash;that, although iniquity abounded on every side and
+the judgments of God were poured out upon the people, still the
+prayers of the faithful few were acceptable in his sight, ascending
+before the throne like sweet incense from off the golden altar.</p>
+<p>After offering up the incense with the prayers of all saints,
+the same angel took his censer and filled it with fire from off the
+altar and cast it (the fire) upon the earth&mdash;a token of God's
+avenging judgments&mdash;"and there were voices, and thunderings,
+and lightnings, and an earthquake." These, of course, were on
+earth, and symbolized the revolutions and convulsions now about to
+take place in the empire.</p>
+<a name="chap8-6" id="chap8-6"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>6. And the seven angels which had the seven trumpets prepared
+themselves to sound.</p>
+<p>7. The first angel sounded, and there followed hail and fire
+mingled with blood, and they were cast upon the earth: and the
+third part of trees was burnt up, and all green grass was burnt
+up.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>We here enter upon a series of prophecies developing fully the
+successive steps in the decline of the Western Roman empire, by
+which it finally tottered to its fall. It was necessary that this
+persecuting, tyrannical government should be subverted in order to
+give opportunity for the establishment of apostate <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page134" name="page134"></a>[pg 134]</span>
+Christianity in the form of the Papacy, as it constituted the "let"
+or hindrance to the full development of the "man of sin" mentioned
+by the apostle in 2 Thes. 2. That persecuting, Pagan Rome was a
+serious obstacle confronting the development of apostasy was
+recognized even by the early Christians. Thus, Tertullian, in his
+notable Apology, chapter 32, says: "Christians are under a
+particular necessity of praying for the emperors, and for the
+continued state of the empire; because we know that dreadful power
+which hangs over the world, and <i>the conclusion of the age, which
+threatens the most horrible evils, is restrained by the continuance
+of the time appointed for the Roman empire</i>. This is what we
+would not experience; and while we pray that it may be deferred, we
+hereby show our good-will to the perpetuity of the Roman state." In
+a subsequent chapter it will be seen that Pagan Rome, broken up
+into minor divisions and no longer able to maintain her position in
+the political world, resigns her power and authority into the hands
+of the rising Papacy. Therefore it is not surprising that the means
+by which this great change is effected should be made the subject
+of prophetic revelation. Besides, we have other things to guide us
+in the interpretation. We can readily identify the symbols under
+the fifth trumpet with the curse of Mohammedanism in the Eastern
+empire, and we would naturally suppose that the first four precede
+those. Again, the symbols are all drawn from the natural world,
+which leads us assuredly into the political affairs of the empire
+for their fulfilment. They are also of the most destructive nature,
+therefore we look for objects of a corresponding desolating
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page135" name="page135"></a>[pg
+135]</span> character. Finally, the vision of the preceding chapter
+represents fierce, destructive winds as about to descend upon the
+earth, being temporarily held in check to give opportunity for the
+primitive establishment of Christianity, implying that they would
+afterwards be let loose to burst like a tornado upon the empire. It
+is said positively that power was given "to hurt the earth and the
+sea" (chap. 7:2), and in the vision before us the effects produced
+upon the earth and the trees are particularly detailed.</p>
+<p>"The earth" signifies the Roman empire, or that portion of the
+earth made the subject of apocalyptic vision. That this application
+of the word <i>earth</i> is correct, is shown by various
+Scriptures. "And it came to pass in those days, that there went out
+a decree from C&aelig;sar Augustus that <i>all the world</i> should
+be taxed." Luke 2:1. "The queen of the South ... came from the
+<i>uttermost parts of the earth</i> [southern Arabia] to hear the
+wisdom of Solomon." Mat. 12:42. "Ye shall be witnesses ... unto the
+<i>uttermost part of the earth</i>." Acts 1:8. The apostles carried
+the gospel personally, only throughout the territory of the
+then-known civilized world&mdash;the Roman empire. Upon this earth
+there descended in the vision before us a fierce storm of hail and
+fire, mingled with blood. Its being mingled with blood would
+indicate its destructive effects. One characteristic of this symbol
+particularly is worthy of notice. Hail and fire cast upon the earth
+would become absorbed speedily or pass into new combinations with
+the surrounding elements, thus not remaining in any permanent form
+except in its effects. In this particular it is wholly unlike the
+symbol of the next trumpet, which is that of a <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page136" name="page136"></a>[pg 136]</span>
+burning mountain cast into the sea, for such a body would naturally
+remain permanently where it fell; whereas a storm of hail and fire
+would soon disappear. Also, the statement that this storm was cast
+upon the earth would indicate that it was a calamity descending
+from without upon the empire.</p>
+<p>Where, now, do we find the object that fully meets the
+requirements of this symbol&mdash;destructive agents descending
+upon the Roman empire like a furious storm of hail and fire,
+accomplishing the first important step toward the subverting of the
+empire? We find it in the irruption of the fierce Gothic tribes of
+the North, who, under Alaric, burst like a tornado upon the empire
+about the beginning of the fifth century, spreading destruction and
+desolation upon every side.</p>
+<p>The following quotations and facts from the highest authority on
+the subject, Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (Vol.
+III, pp. 190-294), will give the reader an idea of the awful
+effects produced by the invasions of these barbarous tribes. The
+great Theodosius, emperor of the Western Roman empire, "had
+supported the frail and mouldering edifice of the republic," but
+upon his death he was succeeded by the weak Honorious. In a few
+months the Gothic barbarians were in arms. "The barriers of the
+Danube were thrown down, the savage warriors of Scythia issued from
+their forests ... and the various tribes of barbarians, who glory
+in the Gothic name, were irregularly spread over the woody shores
+of Dalmatia to the walls of Constantinople." They were "directed by
+the bold and artful genius of Alaric," who soon concluded that the
+conquest of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page137" name=
+"page137"></a>[pg 137]</span> Constantinople was an impracticable
+enterprise. He "disdained to trample any longer on the prostrate
+and ruined countries of Thrace and Dacia, and he resolved to seek a
+plentiful harvest of fame and riches in a province which had
+hitherto escaped the ravages of war.... The troops which had been
+posted to defend the straits of Thermopyl&aelig; retired ...
+without attempting to disturb the secure and rapid passage of
+Alaric; and the fertile fields of Phocis and B&aelig;otia were
+instantly covered by a deluge of barbarians, who massacred the
+males of an age to bear arms, and drove away the beautiful females,
+with the spoil and cattle of the flaming villages. The travelers
+who visited Greece several years afterwards, could easily discover
+the deep and bloody traces of the march of the Goths.... The whole
+territory of Attica, from the promontory of Sunium to the town of
+Megara, was blasted by his baleful presence; and, if we may use the
+comparison of a contemporary philosopher, Athens itself resembled
+the bleeding and empty skin of a slaughtered victim.... Corinth,
+Argos, Sparta, yielded without resistance to the arms of the Goths;
+and the most fortunate of the inhabitants were saved, by death,
+from beholding the slavery of their families and the conflagration
+of their cities."</p>
+<p>Arcadius, the emperor of the East, wishing to dissuade Alaric
+from further conquests and such wholesale massacres, promoted him
+to the rank of Master-general of the eastern Illyricum, but it had
+an opposite effect. "The birth of Alaric, the glory of his past
+exploits, and the confidence in his future designs, insensibly
+united the body of the [Gothic] nation <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page138" name="page138"></a>[pg 138]</span> under his victorious
+standard; and, with the unanimous consent of the barbarian
+chieftains, the Master-general of Illyricum was elevated, according
+to the ancient custom, on a shield, and solemnly proclaimed king of
+the Visigoths. Armed with this double power, situated on the verge
+of the two empires, he alternately sold his deceitful promises to
+the courts of Arcadius and Honorious; until he declared and
+executed his resolution of <i>invading the dominions of the
+West</i>.... He was tempted by the fame, the beauty, the wealth of
+Italy, which he had twice visited; and he secretly aspired to plant
+the Gothic standard on the walls of Rome, and to enrich his army
+with the accumulated spoils of three hundred triumphs." He marched
+into Italy, and the emperor fled before him. A temporary respite
+was finally procured by the promise of a payment of four thousand
+pounds of gold.</p>
+<p>Alaric soon appeared, however, before the very walls of Rome,
+and that splendid city, surrounded by hordes of barbarians, was
+soon reduced to a wretched condition by famine. Two representatives
+of the Romans waited upon Alaric for terms of peace, stating that
+if such could not be arranged the inhabitants of the city, animated
+by despair, would fight to the bitter end. To this the haughty
+conqueror made this famous reply: "The thicker the grass, the
+easier it is mowed." With an insulting laugh, he named the ransom
+required&mdash;all the gold and silver contained in the city, all
+the rich and precious movables, together with all the slaves. Then
+the ministers humbly asked, "What do you intend to leave us?" "Your
+lives," the haughty king replied, and retired. He finally relaxed
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page139" name="page139"></a>[pg
+139]</span> a little and fixed other terms, which included the
+immediate payment of the enormous sum of five thousand pounds of
+gold, thirty thousand pounds of silver, besides other treasure.
+"The victorious leader, who united the daring spirit of a barbarian
+with the art and discipline of a Roman general, was at the head of
+a hundred thousand fighting men; and Italy pronounced, with terror
+and respect, the formidable name of Alaric."</p>
+<p>A second time Rome was besieged by Alaric and taken. Honorious
+was deposed and Attalus made emperor; but Honorious was afterwards
+restored. In A.D. 410 he again marched upon the city, captured and
+entered it. "Eleven hundred and sixty-three years after the
+foundation of Rome, the imperial city, which had subdued and
+civilized so considerable a part of mankind, was delivered to the
+licentious fury of the tribes of Germania and Scythia." For six
+days the city was sacked by the barbarous soldiery, and the
+horrible scenes of robbery, murder, and rapine that ensued can not
+be described. It has been said that "civilized warfare is
+sufficiently terrible," but that would be almost a blessing
+compared with such scenes as these. For a space of four years
+Alaric ravaged Italy almost without opposition.</p>
+<p>The slaughter and devastation that followed this storm of "hail
+and fire" is thus described: "The banks of the Rhine were crowned
+like those of the Tiber, with houses and well-cultivated farms; and
+if a poet descended the river, he might express his doubts on which
+side was situated the territory of the Romans. This scene of peace
+and plenty was suddenly changed into a desert, and the prospect of
+the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page140" name="page140"></a>[pg
+140]</span> smoking ruins could alone distinguish the solitude of
+nature from the desolation of man. The flourishing city of Mentz
+was surprised and destroyed, and many thousand Christians inhumanly
+massacred in the church. Wurms perished after a long and obstinate
+siege. Strasburg, Spires, Rheims, Tournay, Arras, Amiens,
+experienced the cruel oppression of the German yoke, and the
+consuming flames of war spread from the banks of the Rhine over the
+greatest part of the seventeen provinces of Gaul. That rich and
+extensive country, as far as the ocean, the Alps and the Pyrenees,
+was delivered to the barbarians, who drove before them, in a
+promiscuous crowd, the bishop, the senator and the virgin, laden
+with the spoils of their houses and altars."</p>
+<p>Another historian describing the same, a few years after the
+event, says: "The barbarians meeting with little resistance,
+indulged in the utmost cruelty. The cities which they captured,
+they so utterly destroyed that no traces of them now remain, except
+in Thrace and Greece, except here and there a tower or a gate. All
+the men who opposed them they slew, young and old, and indeed
+spared not women, nor even children. Whence there is still but a
+sparse population in Italy. The plunder which they seized in every
+part of Europe was immense, and especially at Rome, where they left
+nothing, either public or private." In this latter description
+reference is also made to some later invasions, but they were all
+of the same desolating character.</p>
+<p>These historical facts show how the green grass, or the feebler
+portion of society&mdash;the tender sex, the young, and the
+aged&mdash;were consumed before this fearful <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page141" name="page141"></a>[pg 141]</span> storm
+of hail and fire; and also how the trees, or the stronger
+portion&mdash;those better able to make resistance&mdash;suffered
+greatly.</p>
+<p>It is also a fact to be observed that these fierce tribes which
+overran Italy, harassed or captured Rome repeatedly, and threatened
+the overthrow of the empire, made no permanent settlement in that
+territory. "Under Alaric the Goths make no lasting settlement. In
+the long tale of intrigue and warfare between the Goths and the two
+Imperial courts which fills up this whole time, cessions of
+territory are offered to the Goths, provinces are occupied by them,
+but as yet they do not take root anywhere; no Western land as yet
+becomes Gothia,"&mdash;Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica, Art. Goths.
+After the death of Alaric (A.D. 412), however, they settled in the
+southern part of Spain and Gaul<a id="footnotetag5" name=
+"footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a>&mdash;part
+of the territory of the West&mdash;but they no longer threatened
+the life of the empire; but, on the contrary, they became allies of
+the Romans in opposing the dreadful incursions of the Huns and
+other barbarians. Thus their invasion of the West was at first
+terribly destructive&mdash;like a storm of hail and fire&mdash;but
+their ravages soon ceased, except in their disastrous and weakening
+effects.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote5" name=
+"footnote5"></a><b>Footnote 5:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag5">(return)</a>
+<p>This division of the Gothic tribes is commonly called the
+Visigoths (Western Goths), as distinguished from the Ostrogoths, or
+Eastern Goths.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<a name="chap8-8" id="chap8-8"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>8. And the second angel sounded, and as it were a great mountain
+burning with fire was cast into the sea: and the third part of the
+sea became blood;</p>
+<p>9. And the third part of the creatures which were in the sea,
+and had life, died; and the third part of the ships were
+destroyed.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page142" name="page142"></a>[pg
+142]</span>
+<p>The symbol of this trumpet is that of a volcanic mountain cast
+into the sea, whence it sends forth its streams of lava in every
+direction until a third of the creatures in the sea are destroyed,
+thus spreading desolation on every side. It would naturally remain
+where it fell, a permanent instrument of destruction.</p>
+<p>We have here a description of the next step of importance in the
+downfall of the Western empire. The second great invasion was that
+of "the terrible Genseric" with his Vandal hordes, who pushed
+southward through Gaul and Spain, conquered the Carthaginian
+territory of northern Africa, and there formed a permanent
+independent government in A.D. 439. From this fixed place, he
+continued for years to make incursions upon the bordering cities
+and islands, burning the cities, murdering the inhabitants, and
+intercepting the commerce of the Mediterranean. During his military
+career, 429-468, he became the terror of the inhabitants of the
+empire, insomuch that historians designate him "the terrible
+Genseric." The depredations committed by his followers were but a
+repetition of such scenes of barbarity as have already been
+described in the invasions of Alaric under the first trumpet,
+therefore I will not devote much space to the historical facts in
+the case. Their deeds, however, were such that the very term
+<i>Vandal</i> has come to be used as a designation of any man of
+ferocious character. Concerning the important part that this
+chieftain acted in the downfall of the Western empire, Gibbon uses
+this significant language: "Genseric, a name which, in the
+destruction of the Roman empire, has deserved an equal rank with
+the names of Alaric and Attila." Vol. III, p. 370.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page143" name="page143"></a>[pg
+143]</span>
+<p>In the year 454 the empress Eudoxia wished to be revenged on
+Maximus, who had murdered her husband Valentinian and had grasped
+the throne, and she secretly invited Genseric to attack Rome. That
+fierce general, who is described by the Encyclop&aelig;dia
+Britannica as "cruel to blood-thirstiness, cunning, unscrupulous,
+and grasping," was glad to undertake the task, and he soon landed
+an army of Vandals and African Moors at the gates of the city. It
+was soon taken and for fifteen days given over to be sacked by the
+barbarous soldiery. When they had glutted their savage instincts
+with the horrible deeds of murder and rapine, loaded with the
+spoils of the imperial city, they returned to Africa, taking with
+them an immense number of captives, including Eudoxia and her two
+daughters. This desolating incursion left the empire weak and
+tottering to its fall. Genseric "became the tyrant of the sea; the
+coasts of Italy, Greece, and Asia, were again exposed to his
+revenge and avarice. Tripoli and Sardinia returned to his
+obedience; he added Sicily to the number of his provinces; and
+before he died, in the fulness of years and glory, he beheld the
+FINAL EXTINCTION of the empire of the West." Gibbon, Vol. III, pp.
+497, 498.</p>
+<p>By "the sea" into which this burning mountain was cast is meant,
+not the Mediterranean nor any other literal sea, but the heart of
+the empire, and that in a state of agitation. The empire was in a
+state of comparative quiet when Alaric appeared; therefore the
+storm of hail and fire is represented as falling upon "the earth,"
+as a result of which society was thrown into a state of great
+agitation, and moved <span class="pagenum"><a id="page144" name=
+"page144"></a>[pg 144]</span> to its depths, like an ocean in a
+storm. This was its condition when Genseric, from his fixed
+position in Africa, began his desolating incursions; therefore the
+next symbol is that of a mountain cast into "the sea." By the sea
+becoming blood is doubtless meant the destruction of life in the
+empire, and "the third part" denotes the vast extent of the
+destruction.</p>
+<p>I must speak with hesitation on what is signified by "the
+creatures which were in the sea" and the "ships." By analogy I
+would be led to refer the former to the rulers and the dignitaries
+in the empire, they bearing an analagous position to the empire
+that fishes do to the waters of the sea; while the latter may refer
+to public monuments and structures.</p>
+<a name="chap8-10" id="chap8-10"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>10. And the third angel sounded, and there fell a great star
+from heaven, burning as it were a lamp, and it fell upon the third
+part of the rivers, and upon the fountains of waters;</p>
+<p>11. And the name of the star is called Wormwood: and the third
+part of the waters became wormwood; and many men died of the
+waters, because they were made bitter.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The description given of this star is similar to that of a large
+burning meteor, such as we frequently see shooting athwart the
+heavens. It fell rapidly to earth, as such meteors often do, and
+struck the fountain-heads of the rivers, imparting to them such a
+poisonous quality as caused the death of those who drank the
+waters.</p>
+<p>This symbol is also drawn from the natural world, and hence we
+must look for its fulfilment in political events. The rapidity of
+its fall and disappearance <span class="pagenum"><a id="page145"
+name="page145"></a>[pg 145]</span> in the waters would direct us to
+an agent who would appear suddenly and soon disappear, and whose
+career would leave bitter results. The direct effects of this
+meteor were experienced by the rivers and the fountains of waters,
+which bear an analagous relation to the sea that bordering tribes
+and nations do to an empire. The heart of the empire, or "the sea,"
+was directly affected by the burning mountain, under the preceding
+trumpet; while the tributaries of the sea, or the bordering tribes,
+are made the subject of direct attack under this symbol and the
+poisonous qualities of their waters carried to far distant
+points.</p>
+<p>Under this striking symbol we have a description of the third
+important step in the downward course of Rome&mdash;the short but
+eventful career of Attila, with his terrible Scythians, or Huns.
+Singularly, Attila was said to "possess the iron sword of the
+war-god <i>Mars</i>," and he claimed for himself the designation or
+title "The Scourge of God"; while his followers were even more
+cruel and barbarous, if possible, than the Goths and the
+Vandals.</p>
+<p>Coming from the remote solitudes of Asia under the leadership of
+their fierce king, they poured like a tornado, first upon the
+inhabitants of the Eastern empire (in 442, 445) and then turned
+their attention westward. Attila ruled over "nearly all the tribes
+north of the Danube and the Black sea," and under his banner fought
+Ostrogoths, Gepid&aelig;, Alani, Heruli, and many other Teutonic
+peoples. Says Gibbon: "The whole breadth of Europe, as it extends
+above five hundred miles from the Euxine to the Adriatic, was at
+once invaded, and occupied, and desolated by the myriads of
+barbarians whom Attila led into the <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page146" name="page146"></a>[pg 146]</span> field." It was the
+boast of Attila that the grass never grew on the spot which his
+horse had trod. In 451 he led his forces, seven hundred thousand
+strong, through the center of Germany into the heart of Gaul, where
+he was met at Chalons by the combined forces of the Visigoths,
+Alans, Franks and Romans, and was defeated, with the loss of one
+hundred and seventy thousand of his men. This was one of the most
+gigantic as well as one of the most important battles of history. A
+rivulet flowing through the field of battle is said to have been
+colored and swollen by the blood of the slain. The next year,
+however, with a greater force at his command, he fell with headlong
+fury upon northern Italy; but he did not attack Rome. Suddenly and
+seemingly without cause, he withdrew his army; and this peculiar
+action of his has been the wonder of historians ever since. Says
+the Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica: "Attila at once withdrew from
+Italy, but the motive which led him to act thus is not known."
+According to the prophecy, he was to fall upon the "rivers and
+fountains of waters" only. A short time later, in 453, he died, and
+"the vast empire over which he had ruled broke up
+<i>immediately</i> after his death, no one chief being powerful
+enough to seize the supremacy." Thus his short but wonderful career
+of about twelve years ended suddenly, like a meteor falling into a
+river.</p>
+<p>But the effects of this invasion were farreaching. Rome in her
+declining strength, being unable to cope with these immense hordes
+of barbarians, was forced to call to her assistance the
+half-civilized tribes of Gothic barbarians against a more dreaded
+foe. The success that attended these conflicts of the combined
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page147" name="page147"></a>[pg
+147]</span> forces were the means of giving greater political
+importance to these Gothic tribes and securing their independence.
+But while they rose, Rome fell. By the very act of employing such
+weapons in defense, Rome robbed herself of the little political
+strength remaining, and she was obliged to accept the bitter
+consequences.</p>
+<p>Under each of these first three trumpets the extent of
+destruction is indicated by the expression "the third part." Since
+the successive steps in the downfall of the empire is the subject
+under consideration, this expression as here applied doubtless has
+particular reference to the loss of political power and life,
+rather than referring directly to the loss of human life sustained.
+With this thought in view, it is evident that the political
+importance of the empire was entirely destroyed by these desolating
+incursions. Of the truth of this fact all historians agree. Nothing
+of Rome remained, except the semblance of a government, when the
+time arrived for the sounding of the next trumpet.</p>
+<a name="chap8-12" id="chap8-12"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>12. And the fourth angel sounded, and the third part of the sun
+was smitten, and the third part of the moon, and the third part of
+the stars; so as the third part of them was darkened, and the day
+shone not for a third part of it, and the night likewise.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The symbol of this trumpet is that of an eclipse of sun, moon,
+and stars, so that they shone not for a third part of the day and
+night. Under the sixth seal we showed that these luminaries of
+heaven are taken as symbols of rulers and princes; for the latter
+bear an <span class="pagenum"><a id="page148" name=
+"page148"></a>[pg 148]</span> analagous relation to the empire that
+the former do to the earth. In the darkening, then, of the sun,
+moon, and stars, we are to look for some disastrous change or
+overthrow in the imperial government. Such an event occurred only a
+few years after the events described under the preceding trumpets.
+With her political strength and resources exhausted, Rome could no
+longer maintain a separate existence, and Odoacer, king of the
+Heruli, overthrew Momyllus Augustulus, the last of the Roman line
+of emperors, and caused himself to be proclaimed king of Italy in
+A.D. 476. This terminated the Western empire; and thus was the
+Roman sun eclipsed in darkness. In a subsequent chapter, however,
+we will find the eclipse lifted at a later period and <i>New
+Rome</i> enjoying all the power and authority lost in her
+predecessors of the old Augustin line.</p>
+<p>Odoacer continued in possession of his kingdom seventeen years.
+Then he was defeated and slain by Theodoric, and by him the kingdom
+of the Ostrogoths was established in Italy. Sixty years later this
+kingdom was subverted by Belisarius, the general of Justinian,
+emperor of the East, to whom it became a tributary province. In
+each of the principal cities of Italy Justinian appointed a
+governor with the title of Duke, in subordination to another with
+the title of Exarch, whose residence was at Ravenna. "Thus, at
+last, was Rome, once the proud mistress of the world, reduced to a
+poor dukedom, made tributary to the Exarch of Ravenna, and he
+holding his authority at the will of the emperor of Constantinople,
+the seat of the Eastern empire."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page149" name="page149"></a>[pg
+149]</span>
+<p>Thus, under the symbols of these four trumpets we have developed
+the wondrous history of the downfall of imperial Rome, in order to
+give opportunity for the scenes of the drama yet to follow. The
+"man of sin" could not be fully revealed in all his terrible
+features until this hindrance was removed out of the way. Imperial
+Rome for three centuries stood as the great opposer of God's people
+and slaughtered thousands, perhaps millions, of the Lord's innocent
+servants, and the hand of retributive Justice was finally extended
+to humble her to the dust. Singularly, the persons whom God made
+choice of to effect her downfall have either regarded themselves as
+special instruments whose mission it was to punish the world or
+else have received such designations by historians because of their
+awful work. Contemporary historians distinguish Alaric by the
+epithets "The Scourge of God," "The Destroyer of Nations"; while
+the great Vandal leader is designated "The Terrible Genseric."
+Attila claimed the title "The Scourge of God."</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>13. And I beheld, and heard an angel flying through the midst of
+heaven, saying with a loud voice, Woe, woe, woe, to the inhabiters
+of the earth by reason of the other voices of the trumpet of the
+three angels, which are yet to sound!</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The later editions of the Greek New Testament give the word
+<i>eagle</i> instead of <i>angel</i>&mdash;denoting a messenger or
+angel flying with the swiftness of an eagle. This messenger
+doubtless is not intended to be symbolic; for it is not one of the
+seven angels, but a messenger possessing a warning, and that
+warning is given "to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page150" name=
+"page150"></a>[pg 150]</span> the inhabitants of the earth," as if
+they were addressed directly. It simply announces that the three
+trumpets yet to sound will possess greater calamities to the people
+of earth than those that have preceded, by reason of which they are
+called woes. The manner, also, in which the woe trumpets are spoken
+of afterwards confirm the statement that the announcement is
+literal and not symbolical. "One woe is past, and, behold, there
+come two more woes hereafter." Chap. <a href="#chap9-12">9:12</a>.
+"The second woe it past: and, behold, the third woe cometh
+quickly." Chap. <a href="#chap11-14">11:14</a>. These announcements
+are evidently literal, and serve to explain the passage before us.
+Accordingly, the last three trumpets are generally referred to as
+the woe trumpets.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page151" name="page151"></a>[pg
+151]</span> <a name="chap9" id="chap9"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+<a name="chap9-1" id="chap9-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven
+unto the earth: and to him was given the key of the bottomless
+pit.</p>
+<p>2. And he opened the bottomless pit; and there arose a smoke out
+of the pit, as the smoke of a great furnace; and the sun and the
+air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the pit.</p>
+<p>3. And there came out of the smoke locusts upon the earth: and
+unto them was given power, as the scorpions of the earth have
+power.</p>
+<p>4. And it was commanded them that they should not hurt the grass
+of the earth, neither any green thing, neither any tree; but only
+those men which have not the seal of God in their foreheads.</p>
+<p>5. And to them it was given that they should not kill them, but
+that they should be tormented five months: and their torment was as
+the torment of a scorpion, when he striketh a man.</p>
+<p>6. And in those days shall men seek death, and shall not find
+it; and shall desire to die, and death shall flee from them.</p>
+<p>7. And the shapes of the locusts were like unto horses prepared
+unto battle; and on their heads were as it were crowns like gold,
+and their faces were as the faces of men.</p>
+<p>8. And they had hair as the hair of women, and their teeth were
+as the teeth of lions.</p>
+<p>9. And they had breastplates, as it were breastplates of iron;
+and the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many
+horses running to battle.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page152" name="page152"></a>[pg
+152]</span>
+<p>10. And they had tails like unto scorpions, and there were
+stings in their tails: and their power was to hurt men five
+months.</p>
+<p>11. And they had a king over them, which is the angel of the
+bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in
+the Greek tongue hath his name Apollyon.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The symbols of this trumpet are of a very peculiar character and
+peculiarly combined. They are not drawn entirely from the natural
+world, showing that we are not to look for their fulfilment in
+political events alone; neither are they drawn from human life in
+any such way as to indicate events in the religious history of the
+church. The leading characters in it, however, are living, active
+agents of such a destructive nature as to entitle them to the
+designation of a woe.</p>
+<p>The first object presented in the vision is a "star" fallen to
+the earth. Our translation conveys the idea that this star was in
+the act of falling; but in the original it is different, being
+there represented as having fallen, its dejection from heaven to
+earth being complete. The only place that it appeared in view was
+on the earth, and there it is described as fallen. A star is a
+symbol either of a civil ruler or of a religious teacher, the
+symbols in connection deciding whether it is set in the political
+or the ecclesiastical firmament. But this was not such a star as He
+who walketh in the midst of the golden candle-sticks holdeth in his
+right hand, but it was a <i>fallen</i> star, indicating that it was
+the propagator of a false faith.</p>
+<p>To this star was given a key. In the Gospels the same figure is
+employed, where the ministers of Christ are represented as
+possessing the keys of the kingdom <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page153" name="page153"></a>[pg 153]</span> of heaven, showing
+that they acted in his name and by his authority. How appropriate,
+then, is this symbol as applied to a false teacher, who possesses,
+not the keys of the kingdom of heaven, but, instead, "the key of
+the bottomless pit"! Thus, under the symbol of the star and the
+key, we have the teacher and his authority set forth. Armed with
+this authority, this false teacher "opened the bottomless pit; and
+there rose a smoke out of the pit, as the smoke of a great furnace;
+and the sun and air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the
+pit." In the Scriptures Jesus is represented as the Sun of
+righteousness, while "the light of the <i>glorious gospel</i> of
+Christ" illuminates the world. But here we have something of the
+opposite character&mdash;a dense smoke eclipsing the sun and
+darkening the heavens. Have we not here a fit representation of a
+delusive faith proceeding from its true source, "the bottomless
+pit"? And is not a fallen star an appropriate symbol of its
+propagator?</p>
+<p>In representing a system of religion by these objects from
+nature we depart from the general rule first laid down&mdash;that
+objects of nature symbolize political affairs, while the department
+of human and angelic life is chosen to represent religious affairs.
+But the reader should bear in mind one important exception to this
+rule&mdash;that things prominently connected with the history of
+the people of God in former ages are frequently employed
+(regardless of the department to which they belong) to represent
+spiritual things, their interpretation being easily seen; such as
+candle-sticks, altar, temple, incense, etc. When the plague of
+"thick darkness" covered the land of Egypt for three days, "the
+children of Israel had light in their dwellings." <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page154" name="page154"></a>[pg 154]</span> In the
+exodus the Lord went before them "by night in a pillar of fire, to
+give them light." After the erection of the tabernacle the holy
+place was constantly illuminated. This natural light in the Jewish
+age constitutes a beautiful type of the spiritual "light of the
+glorious gospel of Christ" that has "shined in our hearts" in the
+Christian dispensation. This spiritual light comes from Christ, the
+"Sun of righteousness," the "true Light which lighteth every man
+that cometh into the world"; and proceeds, also, from his people,
+who "shine as lights in the world." But it is the "light of the
+<i>gospel</i>." This light proceeds in a special sense from God's
+ministers, who are represented as "stars" (chap. <a href=
+"#chap1-20">1:20</a>) and who possess "the keys of the kingdom of
+heaven." Mat. 16:19; 18:18. How appropriate, then, that a
+<i>fallen</i> "star," possessing "the key of the bottomless pit,"
+should be a symbol of a religious impostor, and that the smoke
+which darkened the heavens, eclipsing the sun, the source of light,
+should represent a prominent delusive faith! I have already
+mentioned the fact that the symbols of this vision lead to a series
+of events entirely separate in their nature from the spiritual
+history of the church as developed under other symbols. We find its
+fulfilment in Mohammed and the delusive system he promulgated. In
+the year 606 Mahomet retired to a cave in Hera, near Mecca, and
+there received his pretended revelations, although it was not until
+six years later that he began to teach his doctrines publicly and
+to gain followers outside of the circle of his own family and
+personal friends. Gibbon, Vol. V., p. 121.</p>
+<p>The next object in the vision is the locusts that came out of
+the smoke, to which was given power like scorpions, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page155" name="page155"></a>[pg 155]</span> or
+power to inflict a deadly sting like scorpions. To what living
+agents, then, did the delusion of Mohammedanism give
+birth&mdash;agents of a destructive nature like scorpion locust?
+Evidently, the Saracens,<a id="footnotetag6" name=
+"footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a> those
+warrior followers of Mohammed who flocked to his standard. These
+locusts received the express command that "they should not hurt the
+grass of the earth, neither any green thing, neither any tree; but
+only those men which have not the seal of God in their foreheads."
+The successor of Mohammed, Abubeker, gave the Saracens a command
+that they should "destroy no palm-trees, nor burn any fields of
+grain; cut down no fruit-trees, nor do any mischief to cattle, only
+such as you kill to eat." This command was singular, yet it
+doubtless is not the fulfilment of the command to the locusts; for
+that would be adopting a literal meaning instead of a symbolic one,
+and to complete the picture we should have had literal Saracens
+instead of locusts. We can not consistently make a part literal and
+the remainder symbolical. In the explanation of the first trumpet
+(chap. <a href="#chap8-6">8:6, 7</a>), we showed that grass and
+trees symbolized the inhabitants of a kingdom, grass representing
+the feebler and trees the stronger portions of society. The fact,
+then, that these locusts were not to destroy the green grass and
+trees show that they were not sent as a scourge upon the political
+empire <span class="pagenum"><a id="page156" name="page156"></a>[pg
+156]</span> only, as was the storm of hail and fire under the first
+trumpet. Had their mission been like that of natural locusts, to
+destroy every green thing, we should then conclude that they were
+sent as a scourge upon the empire alone, having nothing whatever to
+do with a system of religion. These locusts, however, were
+commanded not to do what natural locusts always do&mdash;eat green
+grass and trees&mdash;and were commissioned to do what locusts
+never do&mdash;"hurt men," but only those who have not the seal of
+God in their foreheads; that is, the worshipers of a false,
+idolatrous church, who are not known unto God as his true people.
+This is positive proof that the design of this vision is to set
+forth some awful religious imposture; for the "men" that they were
+to hurt are found in the department which by analogy represents
+religious events.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote6" name=
+"footnote6"></a><b>Footnote 6:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag6">(return)</a>
+<p>"In earlier times the name of Saraceni was applied by Greeks and
+Romans to the troublesome Nomad Arabs of the Syro-Arabian
+desert."&mdash;<i>Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica</i>. In the Middle
+Ages, however, Europeans began to call all their Moslem enemies
+Saracens. It is in the limited sense that it is here applied,
+designating the first followers of Mohammed before the rise of the
+Ottoman empire.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The fact that their commission was to torment those "men which
+have not the seal of God in their foreheads," is a proof also of
+the wide-spread apostasies that had already taken place. This was
+the time when the pale horseman was careering over the world
+carrying desolation everywhere by his instruments of
+oppression&mdash;sword, pestilences, famine, and the wild beasts of
+the earth. "The churches both in the Western and Eastern empire
+were in the most deplorable condition, being corrupted with the
+grossest ignorance and idolatry; the virgin Mary, the saints, and
+miserable relics of every description being worshiped in the place
+of Jehovah, and superstition reigning with sovereign power over all
+minds." The Saracen warriors of Mohammed were sent as a scourge
+upon apostate Christendom, overrunning the very <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page157" name="page157"></a>[pg 157]</span>
+territory where the gospel was first preached, and were
+commissioned to "torment" the false professors of Christianity.</p>
+<p>In regard to the kind and the extent of the injury they were to
+inflict, it is said that "to them it was given that they should not
+kill them, but that they should be tormented five months: and their
+torment was as the torment of a scorpion, when he striketh a man.
+And in those days shall men seek death, and shall not find it; and
+shall desire to die, and death shall flee from them." The Saracens,
+as here described under the symbol of the locusts, sustained a
+two-fold relation, and the careful and perfect manner in which the
+symbols are selected to set it forth is worthy of particular
+notice. In the first place, the Saracens were a political body. As
+such, locusts would fitly represent them. But they were also a
+religious body, and how could that fact be symbolically combined
+with the other? It is done by the locusts' being forbidden to act
+out their own nature in eating grass and trees, and their being
+commanded instead to "hurt men," thus changing the field of their
+operations into the department of human life&mdash;the department
+that is chosen to symbolically set forth religious events. Thus the
+politico-religious system of the Saracens is accurately set forth.
+This, also, is nearly as clear as a demonstration that the position
+already taken concerning the nature and the use of symbolic
+language is correct.</p>
+<p>It was given that they should "not kill" men. We have already
+shown that killing men when used symbolically signifies the
+destruction of the political or ecclesiastical organizations and
+institutions of society. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page158"
+name="page158"></a>[pg 158]</span> We could not consistently
+interpret it as literal slaughter, but as some analagous
+destruction. Now, the Saracen power was, as already stated, a
+politico-religious system, and its warriors were an infatuated set
+of religious fanatics, described by historians as "carrying the
+sword in one hand, and the Koran in the other." Thus, they had it
+in their power to kill either religiously or
+politically&mdash;destroy either the church or the empire&mdash;but
+they did neither, for their mission was not to kill, but to
+"torment." "They made extensive conquests and gained immense
+numbers of converts. But they did not overthrow the Eastern empire,
+although they repeatedly attacked and besieged Constantinople,
+suffering, however, uniform defeat in the attempt. Neither did they
+destroy the church, corrupt and apostate as it was. To idolators
+and infidels they put the alternative of the Koran or death; but
+allowed the Christians to retain their church organization, laying
+them, however, under severe contributions, and treating them to the
+ignominious appellation of Christian dogs." Concerning the
+character of Mohammed, Gibbon informs us that "he seldom trampled
+on a prostrate enemy, and he seems to promise, that on the payment
+of a tribute, the least guilty of his unbelieving subjects might be
+indulged in their worship, or at least in their imperfect faith"
+(Vol. V, p. 129), and this, of course, would be the natural
+tendency of his followers. The Armenian and the Greek churches
+survived, and still exist in that portion of the world, but they
+have indeed been greviously tormented. "The proud Moslem, glorying
+in his prophet and religion, has heaped every possible insult and
+injury upon the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page159" name=
+"page159"></a>[pg 159]</span> Christians," yet he suffered them to
+live, but live only for him to torment. Surely the oppressions thus
+experienced are appropriately described by the words, "as the
+torment of a scorpion, when he striketh a man." Under such torments
+the professed Christians might court death, but such is not
+granted; and still they survive, but only to be "tormented." The
+Moslem had "the Christian dog" completely under his foot.</p>
+<p>We now turn our attention to the period of time during which
+these Saracen locusts were to continue their ravages. It is given
+as "five months," or one hundred and fifty days. As this
+description is entirely symbolic, we must consider the time
+symbolic also, for time certainly can be symbolized as well as
+anything else. It is very appropriate for days to symbolize years,
+for they are analagous periods of time; the diurnal revolution of
+the earth being taken to represent the earth's annual movement.
+Such a system of reckoning time was known centuries ago. When Jacob
+complained to Laban because he had been given Leah instead of
+Rachel, "Laban said, It must not be so done in our country, to give
+the younger before the first-born. Fulfil her <i>week</i>, and we
+will give thee this also for the service which thou shalt serve me
+yet <i>seven other years</i>. And Jacob did so, and fulfilled her
+week ... seven other years." Gen. 29:26-30. In this case it will be
+seen that a day was used to represent a year, since seven days, or
+one week, represented seven years. When the law was given, Moses
+recognized the week of seven natural days, the last day of which
+was constituted a Sabbath of rest for Israel; but he also
+instituted <span class="pagenum"><a id="page160" name=
+"page160"></a>[pg 160]</span> a week of seven years, the last year
+of which was a sabbatical year of rest unto the land. This last
+fact will explain such expressions as "forty days, <i>each day for
+a year</i>" (Num. 14:34), and "I have appointed thee each day for a
+year." Ezek. 4:6.</p>
+<p>This period, then, of "five months," or one hundred and fifty
+days, would represent symbolically one hundred and fifty years. As
+before stated, it was in the year A.D. 612 that Mohammed began to
+expound his doctrines publicly and to gather adherents around his
+standard, from which point the locusts commenced, although the
+smoke had been let out of the pit a little previously. For a period
+of one hundred and fifty years from this date, they continued their
+ravages, until A.D. 762. Then they "built Bagdad, which became
+their settled seat of empire; and henceforth they became a settled
+nation, making no further conquests." From that date their power
+began to decline. But during this one hundred and fifty years they
+spread over the country like swarms of devouring locusts. According
+to the well-known facts of history, "they overran Arabia,
+Palestine, Persia, Egypt, and the northern shores of Africa, from
+which they passed to the conquest of Portugal and Spain." These
+were the countries that had been the most oppressed by a
+priest-ridden church and where especially were to be found those
+"men which have not the seal of God in their foreheads." Europe was
+trembling and filled with apprehension at what her fate might be at
+the hands of these fanatic warriors who fought with savage fury,
+under the promise of their prophet that, if slain in battle, they
+should be immediately transported to Paradise. At <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page161" name="page161"></a>[pg 161]</span> the
+zenith of their power, and confident of success, they passed from
+Spain into France four hundred thousand strong. But here they
+exceeded their mission. The southern provinces of France contained
+many Christians who had the "seal of God" upon them, and this
+country became the seat of the Waldenses and Albigenses, of which
+interesting people we shall learn more hereafter. The invading host
+was met at Tours by Charles, grandfather of Charlemagne, who dealt
+them such a crushing blow that he was ever afterward designated by
+the surname Martel&mdash;the Hammer. This battle was one of the
+fiercest recorded in history. The Saracens who had scarcely ever
+experienced defeat fought with the fury of despair, until,
+according to the accounts of that age, three hundred and
+seventy-five thousand of their number lay upon the field of battle
+with their general. This decisive victory saved Europe from her
+threatened subjection to the Mohammedan faith.</p>
+<p>The next point in the vision to claim our attention is the
+particular description of these locusts. Some of the points
+mentioned might find a literal fulfilment in the personal
+appearance of the Saracens&mdash;such as the crowns signifying the
+turbans they wore, etc., but we must adhere strictly to the
+symbolic mode of interpretation and look for their fulfilment in
+Saracen character. Their being like war-horses denotes their
+warlike disposition. The crowns on their heads signify their great
+success and triumphs. Their faces of men and hair like women
+doubtless signify their boldness on the one hand and their
+effeminateness on the other. Their teeth as the teeth of lions show
+their ferocity of character. Their breastplates <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page162" name="page162"></a>[pg 162]</span> of
+iron indicate their invincibility or else their insensibility to
+injuries inflicted upon them. The sound of their wings like horses
+and chariots running to battle denotes the multitude and rapidity
+of their conquests. Their tails like scorpions, containing stings
+with which to "hurt men"&mdash;operating in the religious
+world&mdash;symbolize their position as propagators of a false
+faith. Thus they are set forth in their two-fold character&mdash;as
+invincible warriors and as the zealous professors of a delusion,
+whose sting was like that of a scorpion when he strikes a man.</p>
+<p>"And they had a king over them, which is the angel of the
+bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in
+the Greek tongue hath his name Apollyon." The following fact of
+history will explain this: "The Saracens had their Caliphs, the
+successors of Mohammed, who united in themselves the supreme civil,
+military and ecclesiastical powers. They were the high-priests of
+their religion, the commanders of their armies, and the emperors of
+the nation." This king over them signifies a succession of rulers,
+and they are well described as "the angel of the bottomless pit,"
+for that is the very place where the delusion is said to have
+originated. Mahomet, as a fallen star, opened the pit and let out
+the smoke, and his successors, who grasped his power and authority,
+are fitly characterized as angels from the same place, bearing the
+name Abaddon or Apollyon, which terms both signify Destroyer.</p>
+<p>Is not this a wonderful combination of symbols which can be
+carried out with surprising accuracy? What human ingenuity could
+have ever contrived such a marvelous series of events, and
+described them <span class="pagenum"><a id="page163" name=
+"page163"></a>[pg 163]</span> under such appropriate symbols?
+Finally, let me ask, Where in the whole compass of universal
+history can be found another series of events so perfectly meeting
+every requirement of the symbols? In this we must acknowledge the
+hand of God.</p>
+<a name="chap9-12" id="chap9-12"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>12. One woe is past; and, behold, there come two woes more
+hereafter.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This announcement, that one woe is past, meaning that the period
+of one hundred and fifty years during which the Saracens were to
+continue their conquests has ended, serves an important purpose in
+enabling us to fix the chronology of the events described. It
+proves that they succeed each other.</p>
+<a name="chap9-13" id="chap9-13"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>13. And the sixth angel sounded, and I heard a voice from the
+four horns of the golden altar which is before God,</p>
+<p>14. Saying to the sixth angel which had the trumpet, Loose the
+four angels which are bound in the great river Euphrates.</p>
+<p>15. And the four angels were loosed, which were prepared for an
+hour, and a day, and a month, and a year, for to slay the third
+part of men.</p>
+<p>16. And the number of the army of the horsemen were two hundred
+thousand thousand: and I heard the number of them.</p>
+<p>17. And thus I saw the horses in the vision, and them that sat
+on them, having breastplates of fire, and of jacinth, and
+brimstone: and the heads of the horses were as the heads of lions;
+and out of their mouths issued fire and smoke and brimstone.</p>
+<p>18. By these three was the third part of men killed, by the
+fire, and by the smoke, and by the brimstone, which issued out of
+their mouths.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page164" name="page164"></a>[pg
+164]</span>
+<p>19. For their power is in their mouth, and in their tails: for
+their tails were like unto serpents, and had heads, and with them
+they do hurt.</p>
+<p>20. And the rest of the men which were not killed by these
+plagues yet repented not of the works of their hands, that they
+should not worship devils, and idols of gold, and silver, and
+brass, and stone, and of wood: which neither can see, nor hear, nor
+walk:</p>
+<p>21. Neither repented they of their murders, nor of their
+sorceries, nor of their fornication, nor of their thefts.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>At the sounding of the sixth trumpet, or the second woe trumpet,
+a voice is heard from the four horns (all the horns) of the golden
+altar. This probably denotes that the very same altar where incense
+was offered up to God with the prayers of all saints was now crying
+out to him for vengeance upon an apostate church. That church had
+reached the summit of apostasy and iniquity, the virgin Mary, the
+saints, and thousands of idols in the form of miserable relics
+being worshiped more than God. Because of these abominable
+idolatries, a voice is heard crying from the golden altar for the
+avenging judgments of Heaven, which were the loosing of the four
+angels bound in the river Euphrates. The symbols of this vision are
+also of peculiar character and drawn from different departments. We
+have four angels bound in the Euphrates, an immense army of
+horsemen, then a large number of horses with heads as of lions, and
+fire, smoke, and brimstone issuing from their mouths. The horses
+thus particularly described are evidently intended to have a
+definite symbolical signification, and being objects of nature,
+they would indicate a <span class="pagenum"><a id="page165" name=
+"page165"></a>[pg 165]</span> political or military power. The
+horsemen, being objects from human life, would point us to some
+religious body; while the angels signify the leaders that have
+control of these agencies. Their being commissioned "to slay the
+third part of men" show that they will overthrow some of the
+established institutions of society. We are to look, therefore, for
+some politico-religious power that should invade and overthrow the
+empire. We are, of course, directed to the Eastern empire; for the
+Western division was subverted under the symbols of the first four
+trumpets. With these specifications before us, we shall have no
+difficulty in identifying the power intended&mdash;<i>the Turkish,
+or Ottoman, empire</i>. Its agreement with the symbolic
+representations of the vision will be manifest from a statement of
+the facts of history.</p>
+<p>"The Turks were of Tartar or Scythian origin, from the northern
+regions of Asia, whence also the Huns hived upon Europe during the
+fourth and fifth centuries. The latter passed to the north of the
+Black sea from Russia, and swept the regions of the Danube and the
+Rhine. The Turks, passing to the east of the same, fell upon the
+empire from that quarter. They took possession of Armenia Major in
+the ninth century, where they increased, and in the space of two
+hundred years became a formidable power, being at the end of this
+period combined into four Sultanies, the heads of which were at
+Bagdad, Damascus, Aleppo, and Iconium. The first of these was
+erected A.D. 1055; the two next A.D. 1079, and the last A.D.
+1080&mdash;all of them within twenty-five years, and the three last
+within two."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page166" name="page166"></a>[pg
+166]</span>
+<p>These four Sultanies are doubtless signified by "the four
+angels" that were bound in the river Euphrates. The Euphrates here
+is employed as a symbol, not of the Turks themselves&mdash;for the
+horsemen are their symbol, as we shall see&mdash;but of the binding
+of the angels. The use of this word as a symbol is derived from a
+fact of history, being the object, according to Herodotus, that
+kept Cyrus back from entering the city of Babylon. While the
+Persian monarch surrounded the walls of that ancient metropolis of
+the Babylonian empire, with his army, he was held in restraint by
+the river Euphrates; and it was not until he had diverted its
+waters into an artificial channel that he gained an entrance. So,
+also, these Sultanies, or leaders of the Turks, were held under
+restraint as if bound by the river Euphrates, until the time
+appointed for them to go forth on their mission of conquest.
+Different causes held them back. For a long time they were involved
+in fierce and almost continuous wars with the neighboring Tartar
+tribes on the east and the north, and at the same time the
+Crusaders of Europe were carrying on a determined war with the
+Saracens for the possession of the Holy Land. For two centuries the
+armies of Christendom poured into Syria and Palestine to recover
+from the hands of the "infidels," as they were called, the holy
+sepulchre and the country that gave birth to Christianity; but when
+Europe finally abandoned the project, then went forth the command
+to loose the four angels, "which were prepared for an hour, and a
+day, and a month, and a year, for to slay the third part of man."
+To kill men symbolically, I have already shown, signifies the
+destruction either <span class="pagenum"><a id="page167" name=
+"page167"></a>[pg 167]</span> of an empire as a political body or
+of the church (that is, the so-called church) as a religious body.
+The locusts under the fifth trumpet were to do neither; but the
+symbolic characters of this vision are "to slay the third part of
+men," by which is set forth the fall and subjugation of the Eastern
+empire and church; just as, under the fifth trumpet, the fall of
+the Western empire was described by the darkening of a third part
+of the sun, moon, and stars.</p>
+<p>Before considering the time-prophecy in this vision, we will
+pass on to notice a few particulars respecting the horses and their
+riders. The horsemen possessed breastplates of fire, jacinth, and
+brimstone; while out of the mouths of the horses proceeded fire,
+smoke, and brimstone. There is evidently a special design in
+distinguishing between the horses and their riders. These symbols,
+being drawn from different sources&mdash;the former from the
+natural world and the latter from human life&mdash;point out the
+two characteristics of the Turks as a politico-religious power. The
+symbolic description of the two is almost identical. The horsemen
+had breastplates of fire, jacinth (purplish or reddish blue), and
+brimstone. This describes the character of the Turks as a religious
+system. Out of the horses' mouths proceeded fire, smoke, and
+brimstone, which represents the Moslems as a political power. The
+only difference is that the smoke is substituted for the jacinth,
+but they very nearly agree in color. We are thus brought to the
+conclusion that the political and the religious power of the Turks
+is in harmony and agreement with each other&mdash;united in the
+closest manner possible, like a horse and its rider, and both
+animated by the same spirit. That <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page168" name="page168"></a>[pg 168]</span> spirit is perhaps
+their fierce, fanatical, aggressive, intolerant character.</p>
+<p>The tails of the horses were like serpents with heads, their
+power being in their mouth and in their tails&mdash;the one a lion,
+the other a serpent. It was by the fire, the smoke, and the
+brimstone that came from their lion-heads that the third part of
+men was killed, or their conquests were made; then with their
+serpent-like tails would they torment or "hurt" all those who would
+not adopt the Moslem faith, being in this respect like the scorpion
+locusts. Their lion-heads would denote their invincible strength
+and courage; and their serpent-tails, the tormenting sting
+inflicted upon those whom they subdued but who would not accept
+their religion. It is not said that the riders were the direct
+agents of destruction&mdash;not the Moslem faith as a
+religion&mdash;but it was the horses that accomplished the deadly
+work&mdash;the Ottomans as a political body. This was the power
+that extended conquests and established their empire, although it
+was accompanied by the religious system, working in perfect
+harmony.</p>
+<p>It is said that the "rest of the men which were not killed by
+these plagues" repented not. This expression doubtless signifies
+the Western, or Latin, church. They saw these judgments of the
+Euphratean horsemen on the Eastern empire, and the triumph of the
+Moslem sword and faith (the woe fell as a judgment upon the Eastern
+church); still, they continued as before in their abominable
+idolatries, by which is probably meant their worship of the virgin
+Mary, saints, relics, and images. There was no reformation. Error,
+superstition, and ecclesiastical usurpation prevailed as
+before.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page169" name="page169"></a>[pg
+169]</span>
+<p>The Turks obtained their first victory over the Christians of
+the Eastern, or Greek, empire in A.D. 1281. Within ten years the
+Latins who inhabited Palestine were entirely overthrown (see
+Gibbon, Vol. VI, p. 47), and the way was now clear for Turkish
+aggression against the Greek empire. Before the end of the century
+the four Sultanies mentioned were combined into one consolidated
+empire under Osman (corrupted by Europeans into Ottoman) and from
+him took the name which it still retains&mdash;the Ottoman empire.
+From the time they were let loose, the Turks continued their
+aggressions until A.D. 1453, when Constantinople fell before their
+victorious arms, and the Eastern empire, with the last of the
+Constantines, sunk to rise no more. "The Turkish sword and the
+religion of the Koran were enthroned in the Christian metropolis of
+the Roman emperors; and the proud Moslem had the Christian dog
+completely under his foot." The Ottoman power, however, continued
+to grow and make new conquests until the year A.D. 1672, when they
+conducted a successful campaign against Poland, in which
+forty-eight towns and villages were ceded to the Sultan, with
+promise of an annual tribute of two hundred and twenty thousand
+ducats. See Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica, Art. Turkey. This was
+the last victory they ever gained wherein the Ottoman empire
+obtained any advantage. A little later they marched against Vienna,
+but sustained a miserable defeat. "Venice and Russia now declared
+war against Turkey; misfortune followed misfortune; city after city
+was rent away from the empire; the Austrians were in possession of
+almost the whole of Hungary, the Italians of almost all the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page170" name="page170"></a>[pg
+170]</span> Morea." Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica, Art. Turkey. So
+the power of the Ottomans to extend their conquests and to add to
+their empire, ended with the victory over the Poles in A.D. 1672.
+This fact is even admitted by Demetrius Cantemir, prince of
+Moldavia, one of their historians, in the following language: "This
+was the <i>last</i> victory by which any advantage accrued to the
+Othman state, or any city or province was annexed to the ancient
+bounds of the empire." In accordance with this statement, the same
+historian entitles the first part of his history up to the victory
+over the Poles in 1672 the History of <i>the Growth of the Othman
+Empire</i>, and the remaining portion, <i>The Decay of the Othman
+Empire</i>.</p>
+<p>Calculating now the time during which these horsemen were
+prepared to extend their conquests&mdash;"an hour, and a day, and a
+month, and a year"&mdash;we find according to prophetic, or
+symbolic, time&mdash;thirty days in a month, three hundred and
+sixty in a year&mdash;that it signifies three hundred and
+ninety-one years and fifteen days. This is exactly the period of
+time that elapsed between their first victory in A.D. 1281 and
+their last conquest in A.D. 1672. I can not verify the fifteen
+days, because no history at my command states the exact days of the
+month on which these victories occurred.</p>
+<p>One more point of importance must be considered before we
+conclude this chapter, and that is the continuance of the Ottoman
+power. The first, or Saracen, woe had power to torment men "five
+months," or one hundred and fifty years, during which time they
+continued their ravages. The second woe began when the command was
+given to loose the four angels, <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page171" name="page171"></a>[pg 171]</span> or the beginning of
+the Ottoman conquests. "An hour, and a day, and a month, and a
+year," or three hundred and ninety-one years, marked the time
+during which they were "prepared" to extend their conquests. But it
+is not stated that the woe itself, or the Ottoman power, would then
+cease; for it is not represented as ending until after the death
+and the resurrection of the witnesses (chap. <a href=
+"#chap11-14">11:14</a>), immediately following which the coming of
+Christ and the general judgment, or the third woe, is described.
+Verses 15-18. The Turkish power has made no advance for centuries,
+but has been on the decline; yet it will endure for its allotted
+time. It furnishes us a way-mark by which we can determine our
+position along the pathway of time; for when it falls, we may rest
+assured that the coming of Christ is imminent.</p>
+<p>For nearly two centuries it has been the wonder of civilized
+nations how that corrupt, tyrannical government, which has been
+described as a "despotism tempered by assassination," could exist
+in the increased light and onward advance of modern civilization.
+Concerning its position in Europe, Judson, in his recent history of
+Europe in the Nineteenth Century, says: "The Turkish empire has
+been an element of unrest in Europe. It has long been plain to all
+that it is not permanent. It has taken no root. The Turks are
+merely encamped in Europe; and it is merely a question of time when
+the last of them must return across the Bosphorus." Pp. 269, 270.
+But Turkey will continue to hold this territory of the old Greek
+empire until the time appointed by the Father for her overthrow.
+The nations of Europe have often conspired for her overthrow. This
+is what is known <span class="pagenum"><a id="page172" name=
+"page172"></a>[pg 172]</span> as the great Eastern Question, which
+has been described by one writer as "the expulsion of the Turk from
+Europe, and the scramble for his territory." But it has not yet
+been accomplished, for the very reason doubtless, that it <i>could
+not</i> take place before the resurrection of the witnesses, of
+which we will speak later. Judson thus continues his account of the
+matter: "As soon as this idea was realized [that Turkish power in
+Europe must fall] by the Western nations, in place of the dread of
+the Turk which had so long been part and parcel of European
+thinking, the question of the disposal to be made of the Turkish
+possessions became matter of live interest. And this is the Eastern
+Question. The Greek empire vanished forever when the last
+Constantine fell in 1453. The only problem is one of partition. And
+the heart of it all is the disposal to be made of Constantinople.
+That imperial city is a site that, in strong hands, means power and
+wealth. What shall become of it? Russia early formed designs of
+conquest.... The empress Catherine ... had a grand scheme for a
+restoration of the Greek empire under a Russian prince. Alexander
+I., at Tilsit, planned a partition of the Ottoman empire with
+Napoleon, but the latter declined to see Constantinople in Russian
+hands. 'Constantinople,' said he, 'is the empire of the world.' In
+1844 Nicholas visited England and made guarded suggestions to the
+prime-minister about the Turkish lands. The Ottoman empire, said
+he, was a sick man, nearly at the last extremity.... England
+declined to plan for a share of the inheritance, and nothing was
+done. In 1853 Nicholas resumed the subject with the British
+ambassador at St. Petersburg. The sick <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page173" name="page173"></a>[pg 173]</span> man, he now held, was
+at the point of death.... But again England declined and, indeed,
+the next year went to war with Russia to save the sick man from a
+premature end at the hands of the would-be administrator of the
+estate. Another power doubly interested in the future of the
+Turkish dominions is Austria. That empire has been the traditional
+enemy of the Turk, and at the end of the seventeenth century was
+the actual bulwark of Europe against Mohammedan conquest. When the
+tide of war rolled the other way, Austria was ready to share in the
+spoils. Twice near the end of the eighteenth century, was an
+alliance made between Russia and Austria for the partition of
+Turkey," etc. Pp. 270, 271. Thus, we find that these designs of
+nations for the overthrow of Turkey have so far been overruled; for
+God will not allow that power to come to "a <i>premature
+end</i>."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page174" name="page174"></a>[pg
+174]</span> <a name="chap10" id="chap10"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+<a name="chap10-1" id="chap10-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And I saw another mighty angel come down from heaven, clothed
+with a cloud: and a rainbow was upon his head, and his face was as
+it were the sun, and his feet as pillars of fire:</p>
+<p>2. And he had in his hand a little book open: and he set his
+right foot upon the sea, and his left foot on the earth,</p>
+<p>3. And cried with a loud voice, as when a lion roareth: and when
+he had cried, seven thunders uttered their voices.</p>
+<p>4. And when the seven thunders had uttered their voices, I was
+about to write: and I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me,
+Seal up those things which the seven thunders uttered, and write
+them not.</p>
+<p>5. And the angel which I saw stand upon the sea and upon the
+earth lifted up his hand to heaven,</p>
+<p>6. And sware by him that liveth for ever and ever, who created
+heaven, and the things that therein are, and the earth, and the
+things that therein are, and the sea, and the things which are
+therein, that there should be time no longer:</p>
+<p>7. But in the days of the voice of the seventh angel, when he
+shall begin to sound, the mystery of God should be finished, as he
+hath declared to his servants the prophets.</p>
+<p>8. And the voice which I heard from heaven spake unto me again,
+and said, Go and take the little book which is open in the hand of
+the angel which standeth upon the sea and upon the earth.</p>
+<p>9. And I went unto the angel, and said unto him, Give me the
+little book. And he said unto <span class="pagenum"><a id="page175"
+name="page175"></a>[pg 175]</span> me, Take it, and eat it up; and
+it shall make thy belly bitter, but it shall be in thy mouth sweet
+as honey.</p>
+<p>10. And I took the little book out of the angel's hand, and ate
+it up; and it was in my mouth sweet as honey: and as soon as I had
+eaten it, my belly was bitter.</p>
+<p>11. And he said unto me, Thou must prophesy again before many
+peoples, and nations, and tongues, and kings.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In the preceding chapter we had a history of the two great woes
+that befell apostate Christendom. In this chapter we have in
+contrast a portion of the history of God's true church, to show us
+that all was not lost even though the Eastern church was greviously
+tormented by the serpent-tails of the horses and the Western church
+still continued as before in her sorceries, fornications, and
+abominable idolatries.</p>
+<p>The symbol is that of an angel from heaven. This is not the
+seventh, or the third woe angel, who ushers in the general judgment
+(chap. <a href="#chap11-15">11:15-18</a>), but it is a special
+messenger appearing on earth with the awful message that the end of
+time is near and that when the seventh angel soon begins to sound
+the mystery of God shall be finished and there shall be time no
+longer. This mighty angel is symbolical of some human agencies of
+distinguished character; for it stands in striking contrast with
+the destructive powers described under the preceding trumpets. When
+angels appear on the panoramic scene only in the temple above, they
+themselves are not symbolic characters, but only the conductors of
+the Revelation; but whenever they appear on earth, they represent
+distinguished <span class="pagenum"><a id="page176" name=
+"page176"></a>[pg 176]</span> agencies among men. In the present
+vision the symbol is drawn, not from the natural world, but from
+the heavenly, and the scene is laid upon earth; therefore we must
+look to the history of the church to find its fulfilment in some
+distinguished agencies appearing for the defence of Christ and his
+truth. The cloud, rainbow, face as the sun, and feet as pillars of
+fire, are doubtless intended to set forth their beautiful,
+benignant character, and to show that the angel is not such an one
+as those that were bound in the river Euphrates. This one has the
+bow of covenant promise upon his head, and his face shines as the
+sun.</p>
+<p>Where, then, in the history of God's true church do we find the
+agencies corresponding to the symbol? We find them in the <i>holy
+ministry</i> that he has raised up and is now sending forth to
+preach the pure gospel and to declare the speedy sounding of the
+seventh trumpet and the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ to earth
+again.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Lo, the angel now is standing on the sea and on the land;</p>
+<p>How his voice the air is rending as to God he lifts his
+hand!</p>
+<p>What an awful, awful message! Help us, Lord, this truth to
+see:</p>
+<p>When the seventh trumpet thunders, then shall time no longer
+be.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"One more trumpet yet to summon us before the judgment seat,</p>
+<p>Then the time of our frail planet will be said to be
+complete.</p>
+<p>How the wicked will be wailing and the righteous overjoyed</p>
+<p>When with fire the heav'ns are burning and the earth shall be
+destroyed!"</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>This angel "set his right foot upon the sea, and his left foot
+on the earth," that his lion-like voice might <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page177" name="page177"></a>[pg 177]</span> be
+heard over all the world. This shows that the earth (the
+Apocalyptic earth&mdash;the territory of the Roman empire) was not
+the only place where the message was to be borne; it was to be
+sounded upon the sea, which would indicate its promulgation among
+all nations.</p>
+<p>When his mighty voice sounded, "seven thunders uttered their
+voices"; and when about to record what they said, John was
+commanded to "seal up those things which the seven thunders
+uttered, and write them not." The fact that they were not to be
+recorded shows that they were to constitute no part of this
+Revelation. John evidently thought so at first; for they had the
+appearance of revelation, something clothed with divine authority,
+but they were not to be delivered to the church. What, then, were
+they? The most probable supposition is, that they were things that
+God for some reason did not choose to have revealed. Their sayings
+may have described events just prior to the end so perfectly as to
+leave the world in no doubt respecting the nearness of Christ's
+second coming; whereas it appears in the Scriptures that God has
+designed that it should be a matter of considerable uncertainty,
+especially to the unsaved. However, we can obtain no satisfactory
+explanation of the things uttered by the seven thunders; for we can
+not identify positively what John was commanded to "seal up."</p>
+<p>This angel had in his hand a little book that John was required
+to take and eat. In advancing and taking the book, John himself
+becomes an actor in the symbolic scene, the same as was the book
+and the angel from whose hand he took it. Therefore we must now
+consider John a symbol of something in this <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page178" name="page178"></a>[pg 178]</span>
+vision. Some of the commentators have supposed that this book
+signified the remainder of the book of Revelation. But John was
+commanded to <i>write</i> the Revelations, not to <i>eat</i> them.
+And if he ate them, how, then, could they constitute the remainder
+of the book? Its true signification is undoubtedly the word of God.
+In making such an application we do not necessarily make one book
+merely a symbol of a larger one, as the Bible is, but of God's
+<i>revealed will</i>, just the same as the sealed book of <a href=
+"#chap5">chapter V</a> was the symbol of the divine purposes. When
+we come to explain the resurrection of the witnesses in <a href=
+"#chap11">chapter XI</a>, it will be found that this is the time
+when the word of God is again taught in all its purity, being
+restored for the first time, in its perfect sense, since the
+morning time of this dispensation. A great spiritual famine has for
+centuries overspread the earth. Since the time the black horse of
+the third seal entered on his career, the people have been starving
+for spiritual food. The few crumbs that have been dropped during
+the reign of Protestantism have been eagerly gathered up by the
+spiritually-minded; but, thank God! the time has now arrived when
+the messengers appear with food from heaven, and the multitudes of
+earth's starving millions can "eat in plenty, and be satisfied, and
+praise the name of the Lord God." Joel 2:26. Halleluiah!</p>
+<p>In taking the book from the hand of the angel and eating it,
+John became a symbol of the church, or people of God, who receive
+the Word from the hand of his ministers. The sweetness of its taste
+signifies the eagerness with which people receive it and the
+gladness experienced when they first partake of the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page179" name="page179"></a>[pg 179]</span>
+heavenly manna; while the bitterness resulting therefrom probably
+symbolizes the bitter persecutions and oppositions of which it is
+the occasion. "Yea, and <i>all</i> that will live godly in Christ
+Jesus shall suffer persecution." 2 Tim. 3:12.</p>
+<p>John was told to "prophesy again before many peoples, and
+nations, and tongues, and kings," which signifies that the people
+of God must again be witnesses of his saving grace throughout all
+the world. In the beginning of this dispensation all his people
+prophesied among the nations; for Christ had said unto them, "Ye
+shall be <i>witnesses</i> unto me, both in Jerusalem, and in Judea,
+and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost parts of the earth." Acts
+1:8. So, also, in this evening time we go forth again on the same
+mission, inspired by the soon-coming of our Savior.</p>
+<p>"Even so come, Lord Jesus."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page180" name="page180"></a>[pg
+180]</span> <a name="chap11" id="chap11"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+<a name="chap11-1" id="chap11-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And there was given me a reed like unto a rod: and the angel
+stood, saying, Rise, and measure the temple of God, and the altar,
+and them that worship therein.</p>
+<a name="chap11-2" id="chap11-2"></a>
+<p>2. But the court which is without the temple leave out, and
+measure it not; for it is given unto the Gentiles: and the holy
+city shall they tread under foot forty and two months.</p>
+<a name="chap11-3" id="chap11-3"></a>
+<p>3. And I will give power unto my two witnesses, and they shall
+prophesy a thousand two hundred and threescore days, clothed in
+sackcloth.</p>
+<p>4. These are the two olive-trees, and the two candlesticks
+standing before the God of the earth.</p>
+<p>5. And if any man will hurt them, fire proceedeth out of their
+mouth, and devoureth their enemies: and if any man will hurt them,
+he must in this manner be killed.</p>
+<p>6. These have power to shut heaven, that it rain not in the days
+of their prophecy: and have power over waters to turn them to
+blood, and to smite the earth with all plagues, as often as they
+will.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The two principal objects of this vision is the city of
+Jerusalem with its holy temple and worshipers, and two witnesses
+prophesying for twelve hundred and sixty days. These are not
+objects from the natural world; therefore we may conclude that we
+have not here to do with political events, while the character of
+the symbols point us with certainty to the history of the
+church.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page181" name="page181"></a>[pg
+181]</span>
+<p>There is a possibility that the speaker here is not the angel of
+the preceding chapter; for the words in verse 1 "and the angel
+stood" may be an interpolation, they being found in very few
+manuscripts. See the Revised Version and the Emphatic Diaglott,
+Greek and English. If not, then he must be the angel through whom
+the Revelation was given. Chap. <a href="#chap1-1">1:1</a>;
+<a href="#chap22-8">22:8</a>. Whether the angel is the same as the
+one in the preceding chapter or not, it is evident that that series
+of prophecy ends with chapter 10, and that he here introduces a new
+line of events running over the entire gospel dispensation<a id=
+"footnotetag7" name="footnotetag7"></a><a href=
+"#footnote7"><sup>7</sup></a>, in which John as an active agent in
+the panoramic vision still stands as a symbol of the people of God,
+who, in striking contrast with the blind devotees of an apostate
+church, are commanded to "measure the temple of God, and the altar,
+and them that worship therein." The temple with its altar and court
+and the holy city itself, here used as symbols, are representative
+of something analagous, and refer to no other than the outward,
+visible church of God with its doctrines and worshipers. Its
+measurement is designed to show how far it conforms to the true
+church; while the rod is a symbol of the revealed will of God, by
+which the measurement is brought as to a true standard.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote7" name=
+"footnote7"></a><b>Footnote 7:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag7">(return)</a>
+<p>This statement may seem to conflict with the classification of
+events in the "Diagram of the Revelation," where this prophecy is
+treated, not as an independent series, but as part of a compound
+series beginning with chapter 8 and ending with chapter 11. For
+thus classifying it my reason is, that the line of prophecy
+beginning with chapter 8 introduces the seven trumpets, and
+therefore the series is not complete until the seventh trumpet is
+given, which event concludes the line of truth given in the present
+chapter.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page182" name="page182"></a>[pg
+182]</span>
+<p>By noticing briefly the arrangement of the temple and the
+purposes to which the different apartments were put, we shall be
+able to understand better the design of this vision. The temple
+proper consisted of two apartments. In the first stood the altar of
+incense and other things; in the second, the ark of the covenant,
+etc. The priests officiated in the first apartment regularly, while
+into the second went the high-priest alone once every year. This,
+Paul informs us, was a shadow of a greater and more perfect
+tabernacle. Heb. 9:1-11; 8:2. The altar that is mentioned and that
+John was to measure is a symbol of the great cardinal doctrine of
+the church&mdash;the atonement and mediation of Christ. He was the
+sacrifice made for sin, through whom we have redemption and access
+unto God. John was also told to measure those who worshiped
+therein&mdash;the officiating ministers in the sanctuary&mdash;who
+were thus made symbols of the ministers and the teachers in the
+church. To measure the temple of God, then, was to ascertain the
+great doctrines taught in the Scriptures and symbolized by the
+sanctuary, the altar, and the priests; namely, the doctrines of the
+New Testament concerning God as the supreme lawgiver, the atonement
+of Jesus Christ as the only ground for justification, and the
+ministers whom he appointed to officiate in his church.</p>
+<p>These are the great principles corrupted by the Papacy. Instead
+of the one supreme God, we find another in the temple of God,
+"showing himself that <i>he</i> is God." Christ was not recognized
+as the supreme and only head of the church; but instead the Pope
+claimed the title of universal head and legislated supreme, while
+his decrees and anathemas were accepted <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page183" name="page183"></a>[pg 183]</span> as
+from Jehovah himself. Christ was not regarded as the only mediator
+between God and man, but the virgin Mary and the saints were
+exalted to share the mediatorial throne, the mother being more
+honored than the Son. Penance, counting of beads, works of
+supererogation, were believed to be more effectual in obtaining
+forgiveness of sin than living faith in our only Redeemer. Finally,
+in place of the humble ministers of Christ whom he appointed to
+officiate in his church, there were haughty lords and rulers,
+making the most extravagant claims to power and authority over the
+minds and consciences of men. The court of the temple was the space
+outside of the sanctuary occupied by the congregation while the
+worship within was conducted by the priests. John was told to leave
+this out and measure it not; for it was given to the Gentiles to
+tread under foot, or profane, for the space of forty and two
+months, or twelve hundred and sixty days. In the estimation of a
+Jew, the Gentiles were all idolaters and outside of God's covenant
+favor. As a symbol, then, we are to understand that the great body
+of worshipers thus brought to view are not the true children of God
+at all, but are, as it were, uncircumcised, idolatrous Gentiles,
+having no connection whatever with the great head of the church and
+no part in the covenant of his mercy. The whole city of Jerusalem
+was to be given over to this profane multitude and by them
+desecrated for forty-two months, denoting that this great company
+of worshipers was to constitute the visible, external church during
+the period specified. It is as though the city of Jerusalem were
+occupied by the idolatrous heathen, and the Jews driven out as
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page184" name="page184"></a>[pg
+184]</span> aliens. These Gentiles, then, were to constitute the
+one great (so-called) universal church&mdash;the Church of
+Rome.</p>
+<p>Forty and two months, or twelve hundred and sixty days, are
+symbolic time, signifying twelve hundred and sixty years, during
+which time the power of apostasy was to reign supreme over the
+minds of men. The same period is also referred to frequently in
+subsequent chapters. It is necessary, then, for us to ascertain at
+what period of time the church was given over to a profane
+multitude that was not the true people of God. Some have supposed
+that this must refer to the time when Popery became fully
+established. Such, however, could not be the case (although the
+time-period includes that important event); for the power of
+apostasy was greatly developed centuries before the final supremacy
+of the Popes was established, and was necessary in order to prepare
+the way for their exaltation. The Popes obtained their authority by
+degrees. In A.D. 606 the emperor Phocas conferred the title
+"Universal Bishop" upon the Pope of Rome. In A.D. 756 the Pope
+became a temporal sovereign. Yet the power of Papal usurpation did
+not reach the summit until the reign of the impious Hildebrand, who
+succeeded to the Popedom in A.D. 1073, under the title of Gregory
+VII. But according to the symbols before us, we must look for a
+period not so much when the Popes were enabled to definitely
+enforce their arrogant claims, as when the ministry became
+corrupted and when the inhabitants of the city, or the devotees of
+the visible church, became a profane multitude entirely estranged
+from the covenant of promise. The <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page185" name="page185"></a>[pg 185]</span> usurpations of the
+ministry that accompanied this great change in the external church
+have been considered already under the symbols of <a href=
+"#chap6">chapter VI</a>. This mighty transformation to a church
+containing nothing but uncircumcised Gentiles was fully
+accomplished during the latter half of the third century, from
+which date we must look for the true disciples of the Lord as
+entirely separate from the hierarchy. A few quotations from
+standard and ecclesiastical histories will show this important
+epoch in the rise of the Papacy that plunged the world into almost
+universal apostasy.</p>
+<p>"The living church retiring gradually within the lonely
+sanctuary of a few solitary hearts, an external church was
+substituted in its place, and all its forms were declared to be of
+divine appointment. Salvation no longer flowing from the Word,
+which was henceforward put out of sight, the priests affirmed that
+it was conveyed by means of the forms they had themselves invented,
+and that no one could obtain it but by these channels.... The
+doctrine of the church and the necessity of its visible unity,
+which had begun to gain ground in the <i>third century</i>, favored
+the pretensions of Rome." D'Aubigne's History of the Reformation,
+Book I, Chap. 1.</p>
+<p>"At the end of the third century almost half the inhabitants of
+the Roman empire, and of several neighboring countries, professed
+the faith of Christ. About this time endeavors to preserve a unity
+of belief, and of church discipline, occasioned numberless disputes
+among those of different opinions, and led to the establishment of
+an ecclesiastical tyranny." Encyclop&aelig;dia of Religious
+Knowledge.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page186" name="page186"></a>[pg
+186]</span>
+<p>Concerning the Roman diocese, the Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica
+says, "Before the termination of the third century the office was
+held to be of such importance that its succession was a matter of
+interest to ecclesiastics living in distant sees." Vol. XIX, p.
+488.</p>
+<p>"Almost proportionate with the extension of Christianity was the
+decrease in the church of vital piety. A philosophizing spirit
+among the higher, and a wild monkish superstition among the lower
+orders, fast took the place in the third century of the faith and
+humility of the first Christians. Many of the clergy became very
+corrupt, and excessively ambitious. In consequence of this there
+was an awful defection of Christianity." Marsh's Church History, p.
+185.</p>
+<p>"We have found it almost necessary to separate, and indeed
+widely to distinguish the events of the two first, from those of
+the third century, for nearly at this point we are disposed to
+place the FIRST CRISIS in the internal history of the church."
+Waddington's Church History.</p>
+<p>"This season of external prosperity was improved by the
+ministers of the church for the exertion of new claims, and the
+assumption of powers with which they had not been previously
+invested. At first these claims were modestly urged, and gradually
+allowed; but they laid a foundation for the encroachments which
+were afterwards made upon the rights of the whole Christian
+community, and for lofty pretensions to the right of supremacy and
+spiritual dominion.... Several alterations in the form of church
+government appear to have been introduced during the third century.
+Some degree of pomp was thought necessary.... The external dignity
+of the ministers of religion <span class="pagenum"><a id="page187"
+name="page187"></a>[pg 187]</span> was accompanied by a still
+greater change in its discipline.... Many of the Jewish and Pagan
+proselytes ... languished in the absence of ceremonies which were
+naturally adapted to the taste of the unreflecting multitude, while
+the insolent infidel haughtily insisted upon the inanity of a
+religion which was not manifested by an external symbol or
+decoration. In order to accommodate Christianity to these
+prejudices, a number of rites were instituted; and while the
+dignified titles of the Jewish priesthood were through a compliance
+with the prejudices of that people, conferred upon the Christian
+teachers, many ceremonies were introduced which coincided with the
+genius of Paganism. The true gospels were taught by sensible
+images, and many of the ceremonies employed in celebrating the
+heathen mysteries were observed in the institutions of Christ,
+which soon in their turn obtained the name of mysteries, and served
+as a melancholy precedent for future innovations, and as a
+foundation for that structure of absurdity and superstition which
+deformed and disgraced the church." Rutter's History of the Church,
+pp. 52-56.</p>
+<p>This "season of external prosperity" mentioned by Rutter began
+with the accession of Gallienus to the imperial throne in A.D. 260.
+Up to this time the hand of persecution had been raised against the
+church almost incessantly; but from 260 until the reign of
+Diocletian persecution almost ceased, during this space of about
+forty years. But this period also marked the greatest decline in
+spiritual things and a marvelous development of the hierarchy.
+Speaking of the bishop of Rome in these times, Dowling says, "He
+far surpassed all his brethren in the magnificence <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page188" name="page188"></a>[pg 188]</span> and
+splendor of the church over which he presided; in the riches of his
+revenues and possessions; in the number and variety of his
+ministers; in his credit with the people; and in his sumptuous and
+splendid manner of living." History of Romanism, p. 34.</p>
+<p>Ammianus Marcellinus, a Roman historian, who lived during these
+times, adverting to this subject, says: "It was no wonder to see
+those who were ambitious of human greatness, contending with so
+much heat and animosity for that dignity, because when they had
+obtained it, they were sure to be enriched by the offerings of the
+matrons, and of appearing abroad in great splendor, of being
+admired for their costly coaches, and sumptuous feasts, outdoing
+sovereign princes in the expenses of their table." This led
+Proetextatus, a heathen, who was pr&aelig;fect of the city, to say,
+"Make me bishop of Rome, and I'll be a Christian too!"</p>
+<p>Speaking of the period now under consideration, Eusebius, "the
+father of church history," "mentions one Paul, who was at this time
+bishop of Antioch; who lived in luxury and licentiousness, and who
+was a teacher of erroneous doctrines, and usurped so great
+authority that the people feared to venture to accuse him. In the
+conclusion of the same chapter in which this is found, he shows
+that after a general council was held at Antioch, this Paul was
+excommunicated and robbed of his bishopric by the bishops of Rome
+and Italy; from this it appears that they possessed an authority
+still greater than that usurped by Paul." The following are his
+words: "Paul, therefore, having thus fallen from the episcopate,
+together with the true <span class="pagenum"><a id="page189" name=
+"page189"></a>[pg 189]</span> faith as already said, Domnus
+succeeded in administration of the church at Antioch. But Paul
+being unwilling to leave the building of the church, an appeal was
+made to the emperor Aurelian, who decided most equitably on the
+business, ordering the building to be given up to those whom the
+Christian bishops of Italy and Rome should write." Eccl. History,
+Book VII, Chap. 30. The Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica says that
+this council at which Paul was excommunicated was held "probably in
+the year 268," and that "Paul continued in his office until the
+year 272, when the city was taken by the emperor Aurelian, who
+decided in person that the church-building belonged to the bishop
+who was in epistolary communication with the bishops of Rome and
+Italy." Vol. XVIII, p. 429.</p>
+<p>The above extracts show not only the development of error in the
+church, but also the great power already obtained by the hierarchy.
+Geo. Fisher says, "The accession of Constantine [A.D. 312] found
+the church so firmly organized under the hierarchy that it could
+not lose its identity by being absolutely merged in the state."
+History of the Christian Church, p. 99.</p>
+<p>In the year A.D. 270 Anthony, an Egyptian, the founder of the
+monastic institution, fixed his abode in the deserts of Egypt and
+formed monks into organized bodies. "Influenced by these eminent
+examples [Anthony, Hilarion, <i>et al.</i>] immense multitudes
+betook themselves to the desert, and innumerable monasteries were
+fixed in Egypt, Ethiopia, Lybia and Syria. Some of the Egyptian
+abbots are spoken of as having had five, seven, or even ten
+thousand monks under their personal direction; and the Thebias, as
+well as certain spots in Arabia, are reported <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page190" name="page190"></a>[pg 190]</span> to
+have been literally crowded with solitaries. Nearly a hundred
+thousand of all classes, it is said, were at one time to be found
+in Egypt.... Although the enthusiasm might be at a lower ebb in one
+country than in another, it <i>actually affected the church
+universal</i>, so far as the extant materials of ecclesiastical
+history enables us to trace its rise and progress.... The more
+rigid and heroic of the Christian anchorets dispensed with all
+clothing except a rug, or a few palm leaves round the loins. Most
+of them abstained from the use of water for ablution; nor did they
+usually wash or change the garments they had once put on; thus
+<i>St. Anthony</i> [the founder of this order] bequeathed to
+Athanasius a skin in which his sacred person had been wrapped for
+half a century. They also allowed their beards and nails to grow,
+and sometimes became so hirsute, as to be actually mistaken for
+hy&aelig;nas or bears." Hist. of Romanism, pp. 88, 89. Reader, what
+was the condition of the so-called church in A.D. 270 that could
+make the introduction of such abominations possible? Although many
+more historical quotations on this point might be added, I will
+conclude with the two following extracts from Joseph Milner.</p>
+<p>"We shall, for the present, leave Anthony propagating the
+monastic dispositions, and extending its influence not only into
+the next century, but for many ages after, and conclude this view
+of the state of the <i>third century</i>, with expressing our
+regret that the faith and love of the gospel received toward the
+close of it a dreadful blow from the encouragement of this
+unchristian practise." Cen. III, Chap. 20.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page191" name="page191"></a>[pg
+191]</span>
+<p>"Moral, and philosophical, and monastic instructions will not
+effect for men what is to be expected from evangelical doctrine.
+And if the faith of Christ was so much declined (and its decayed
+state <i>ought to be dated from about the year 270</i>), we need
+not wonder that such scenes as Eusebius hints at without any
+circumstantial details took place in the Christian world." Cent.
+IV, Chap. 1.</p>
+<p>After reading the foregoing statements of historians, the reader
+will, I believe, agree with me that the year 270 is a consistent
+date to mark the time when the visible external church was wholly
+given over to the profane multitude of uncircumcised, idolatrous
+Gentiles to tread under foot. Measuring forward the allotted period
+of twelve hundred and sixty years brings us to the exact date of
+the first Protestant creed (<i>the Augsburg Confession</i>) in A.D.
+1530. We must point to this date both for the end of Rome's
+universal spiritual supremacy and for the rise of Protestantism.
+D'Aubigne, in his History of the Reformation, when he comes to this
+period, says: "The conflicts hitherto described have been only
+partial; we are entering upon a new period, that of general
+battles. Spires (1529) and Ausburg (1530) are names that shine
+forth with more immortal glory than Marathon, Pavia, or Marengo.
+Forces that up to the present time were separate, are now uniting
+into one energetic band." Book XVIII, Chap. 1. "The first two books
+of this volume contain the most important epochs of the
+reformation&mdash;the Protest of Spires, and the Confession of
+Augsburg.... I determined on bringing the reformation of Germany
+and German Switzerland to the <i>decisive epochs</i> of 1530 and
+1531. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page192" name="page192"></a>[pg
+192]</span> The history of the reformation, properly so called, is
+then in my opinion almost complete in those countries. The work of
+faith has there attained its apogee: that of conferences, of
+interims, of diplomacy begins.... The movement of the sixteenth
+century has there made its effort. I said from the very first, It
+is the history of the reformation and not of Protestantism that I
+am relating." D'Aubigne, Preface to Vol. V.</p>
+<p>The next important object in the vision is the "two witnesses"
+that prophecied in sackcloth. From the description given, it would
+appear at first that these witnesses were active intelligent
+agents; and as such, belonging to the department of human life,
+they would symbolize the church, the number two denoting the
+ministry and the people of God. But the church is already
+symbolized in this chapter, the angel representing the ministry, as
+in the preceding chapter, and John, who is clearly one of the
+symbolic agents in this vision, representing the church; therefore
+the two witnesses must be representative of something else. Since
+the actions ascribed to them are drawn from the department of human
+life, it is evident that their interpretation is to be found in
+connection with the affairs of the church. By way of explanation,
+verse 4 represents them to be "the two olive-trees, and the two
+candle-sticks standing before the God of the earth," although it is
+not stated that any olive-trees and candle-sticks were shown in
+this prophetic vision. In this reference is made to the fourth
+chapter of Zechariah, where two olive-trees are represented as
+standing one on each side of a golden candle-stick, distilling into
+it their oil for light. When asked for <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page193" name="page193"></a>[pg 193]</span> the signification of
+the two olive-trees and the candlestick, the angel answered, "This
+is the <i>Word</i> of the Lord ... by my <i>Spirit</i>, saith the
+Lord." Ver. 6. That the Word of God and the Spirit of God are
+special witnesses is proved by many texts. Jesus said, "Search the
+Scriptures ... they are they which <i>testify</i> of me." John
+6:39. "This gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the
+world for a <i>witness</i> unto all nations." Mat. 24:14. "The Holy
+Ghost also is a <i>witness</i>." Heb. 10:15. "The Spirit itself
+beareth <i>witness</i>." Rom. 8:16. "It is the Spirit that beareth
+<i>witness</i>." 1 John 5:6. It is the Spirit acting in conjunction
+with the Word of God that gives spiritual life, through
+regeneration, unto men, and which opens their understanding that
+they may know the things of God. 2 Cor. 2:9-15.</p>
+<p>God may have given us the explanation that these two witnesses
+were the same as the olive-trees and the candle-sticks to prevent
+our being led astray with the supposition that they were actually
+intelligent agents. (I speak humanly.) Accepting this statement,
+the actions of these witnesses here described can be explained only
+by the figure of speech known as Personification, by which it is
+proper, under certain conditions, to attribute life, action, and
+intelligence to inanimate objects. Thus, the blood of Abel is said
+to have cried from the ground. Gen. 4:9, 10. "The stone shall cry
+out of the wall, and the beam out of the timber shall answer it."
+Hab. 2:11. "The hire of the laborers ... which is of you kept back
+by fraud crieth: and the cries ... are entered into the ears of the
+Lord of Sabaoth." Jas. 5:4. "The mountains and the hills shall
+break forth before you <span class="pagenum"><a id="page194" name=
+"page194"></a>[pg 194]</span> into singing, and all the trees of
+the field shall clap their hands." Isa. 55:12. I would not attempt
+to vary from the general order and explain these two witnesses by
+the figure of personification, were it not for the fact that the
+two olive-trees and the two candle-sticks are here given as a means
+of explanation; and trees and candle-sticks, we know, are not
+active, intelligent agents, and consequently do not necessarily
+symbolize such.</p>
+<p>To "hurt" the Word and Spirit of God is to oppose, corrupt, or
+pervert their testimony and to turn people away from them; and the
+judgments of Heaven are pronounced in that Word and by that Spirit
+against such as turn away from the truth unto fables. They shall
+have their part in the lake that burns with fire and brimstone.
+Rev. 20:15; 22:8. It is also said of them: "These have power to
+shut heaven, that it rain not in the days of their prophecy: and
+have power over waters to turn them to blood, and to smite the
+earth with all plagues, as often as they will." This indicates the
+fact that these were God's own special witnesses sent in his name
+and by his authority, as were the prophets of old. Elijah shut up
+heaven by prayer; Moses called down the plagues upon Egypt; and
+these were God's attestations that they were his divinely
+commissioned servants. So these two witnesses had power to shut
+heaven and to smite the earth with plagues, not literally, but
+herein is symbolically set forth the fact that they were God's
+appointed agents, even though despised and rejected, like Elijah in
+the midst of apostate Israel and Moses amid idolatrous Egypt, yet,
+like them, with the seal of Heaven upon their ministry.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page195" name="page195"></a>[pg
+195]</span>
+<p>In the beginning of this dispensation these two witnesses were
+the vicars of Christ in his church upon earth. The word of God and
+the Spirit of God were the Governors of his people. At that time
+they had perfect freedom of action among the children of God; but
+when the apostasy arose, the governing power of the Word and Spirit
+of God in the church was gradually usurped by the rising hierarchy,
+until, finally, men had entire authority in what was called the
+visible church. This was brought about when, to quote Mosheim's
+words, the bishops grasped the power and authority "to prescribe
+authoritative rules of faith and manners." D'Aubigne explains it
+thus: "Salvation no longer flowing from the <i>Word</i>, which was
+henceforward put out of sight, the priests affirmed that it was
+conveyed by means of the forms they had themselves invented, and
+that no one could attain it except by these channels.... Christ
+communicated to the apostles, and these to the bishops, the unction
+of the <i>Holy Spirit</i>; and this Spirit is to be procured only
+in that order of succession.... Faith in the heart no longer
+connected the members of the church, and they were united by means
+of bishops, archbishops, popes, mitres, canons and ceremonies."
+History of the Reformation, Book I, Chap. 1. Thus, the Word and
+Spirit of God as the true vicars of Christ in his church were
+finally expelled from what was looked upon as the one visible
+church, and with them the true worshipers also were driven out; and
+nothing remained in the public view except the great company of
+profane idolaters already referred to. The same is referred to in a
+subsequent chapter as the flight of the true church into the
+wilderness, where, hidden <span class="pagenum"><a id="page196"
+name="page196"></a>[pg 196]</span> from sight, she had a place
+prepared of God for twelve hundred and sixty days. So after all,
+God had a true church during the Dark Ages&mdash;a people that
+stood in opposition to the abounding corruption and iniquity of the
+church of Rome; a people that rejected the established hierarchy
+and gave heed to the Word and Spirit of God. But their numbers were
+so few, comparatively, that the operations of the two witnesses
+were greatly limited; hence they are represented as being clothed
+in sackcloth, a symbol of melancholy and mourning.</p>
+<p>Among those who opposed the teachings of that apostate church
+were the Cathari, Poor Men of Lyons, Lombards, Albigenses,
+Waldenses, Vaudois, etc. The name Waldenses and Albigenses have
+frequently been loosely applied to all the bands of people that
+passed under various titles in different countries and that opposed
+the doctrines and ecclesiastical tyranny of Rome. Speaking of the
+twelfth century, Bowling says: "There existed at that dark period,
+when 'all the world wondered after the beast,' a numerous body of
+the disciples of Christ, who took the New Testament for their
+guidance and direction in all the affairs of religion, rejecting
+the doctrines and commandments of men. Their appeal was from the
+decisions of councils, and the authority of popes, cardinals, and
+prelates, to the law and the testimony&mdash;the words of Christ
+and his holy apostles." History of Romanism, p. 272. Egbert, a
+monkish writer of that age, speaking of them, says that he had
+often disputed with these heretics, "a sort of people," he adds,
+"who are very pernicious to the Catholic faith, which, like moths,
+they corrupt and destroy. They are armed," <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page197" name="page197"></a>[pg 197]</span> says
+he, "<i>with the words of Scripture</i> which in any way seem to
+favor their sentiments, and with these they know how to defend
+their errors, and to oppose the Catholic truth. They are increased
+to great multitudes throughout all countries, to the great danger
+of the church [of Rome]."</p>
+<p>For lack of space, an extensive history of these interesting
+people can not be given; but a few references to them by their most
+inveterate enemies, the Papists themselves, are of such importance
+that I can not pass them by unnoticed. The testimony given by
+Evervinus, a zealous Catholic, in a letter he wrote to the
+celebrated Bernard, at the beginning of the twelfth century,
+relative to the doctrine and manners of these so-called
+<i>heretics</i>, is exceedingly valuable. Says he: "There have
+lately been some heretics discovered among us, near Colonge [sic:
+Cologne], of whom some have, with satisfaction returned again to
+the church. One that was a bishop among them, and his companions,
+openly opposed us, in the assembly of the clergy and laity, the
+lord-archbishop himself being present, with many of the nobility,
+maintaining their heresy from <i>the words of Christ and his
+apostles</i>. But, finding that they made no impression, they
+desired that a day might be fixed, upon which they might bring
+along with them men skilful in their faith, promising to return to
+the church, provided their teachers were unable to answer their
+opponents; but that otherwise, they would rather die than depart
+from their judgment.</p>
+<p>"Upon this declaration, having been admonished to repent, and
+three days allowed them for that purpose, they were seized by the
+people, in their excess of zeal, <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page198" name="page198"></a>[pg 198]</span> <i>and committed to
+the flames</i>! and, what is most astonishing, they came to the
+stake and endured the torment not only with patience, but even with
+joy. In this case, O holy father, were I present with you, I should
+be glad to ask you, how these members of Satan could persist in
+their heresy with such constancy and courage as is rarely to be
+found among the most religious in the faith of Christ?"</p>
+<p>He then proceeds: "Their heresy is this: They say that the
+church (of Christ) is only among themselves, because they alone
+follow the ways of Christ, and imitate the apostles, not seeking
+secular gains.... Whereas they say to us, 'Ye join house to house,
+and field to field, seeking the things of this world.'... They
+represent themselves as the poor of Christ's flock, who have no
+certain abode, fleeing from one city to another, like sheep in the
+midst of wolves, enduring persecution with the apostles and
+martyrs: though strict in their manner of life&mdash;<i>abstemious,
+laborious, devoted, and holy</i> ... living as men who are not of
+the world. But you, say they, lovers of the world, have peace with
+the world, because ye are in it. False apostles, who adulterate the
+word of God, seeking their own things, have misled you and your
+ancestors. Whereas, we and our fathers, having been born and
+brought up in the apostolic doctrine, have continued in the grace
+of Christ, and shall continue so to the end.... They affirm that
+the apostolic dignity is corrupted by indulging itself in secular
+affairs, while it sits [professedly] in St Peter's chair. They do
+not hold with the baptism of infants, alleging that passage of the
+gospel, 'He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved.' They
+place no confidence <span class="pagenum"><a id="page199" name=
+"page199"></a>[pg 199]</span> in the intercession of saints and all
+things observed in the church, which have not been established by
+Christ himself, or his apostles, they pronounce to be
+superstitious. They do not admit of any purgatory fire after death,
+contending, that the souls of men, as soon as they depart out of
+the bodies, do enter into rest or punishment ... by which means
+they make void all the prayers and oblations of the faithful for
+the deceased.... I must inform you also, that those of them who
+have returned to our church, tell us that they had great numbers of
+their persuasion, scattered almost everywhere.... And as for those
+who were burnt, they, in defense they made of themselves, told us
+that this heresy had been <i>concealed from the time of the
+martyrs</i> [by which is meant the early period of Christianity]
+and that it had existed in Greece and other countries."</p>
+<p>Although Bernard began a strenuous opposition to these people,
+still he testifies: "If you ask them of their faith, nothing can be
+more Christian-like; and if you observe their conversation, nothing
+can be more blameless, and what they speak they make good by their
+actions.... As to life and manners, he circumvents no man,
+overreaches no man, does violence to no man. He fasts much and eats
+not the bread of idleness; but works with his hands for his
+support."</p>
+<p>Claudius, archbishop of Turin, who joined in hunting and
+persecuting them to the death, writes, "Their heresy excepted, they
+generally live a purer life than other Christians." Again, "In
+their lives they are perfect, irreproachable, and without reproach
+among men, addicting themselves with all their might to the service
+of God."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page200" name="page200"></a>[pg
+200]</span>
+<p>The sum and substance of their offense is mentioned by Cassini,
+a Franciscan friar, where he says, "That ALL THE ERRORS of these
+Waldenses consisted in this, that they denied the church of Rome to
+be the holy mother church, and <i>would not obey her
+traditions</i>."</p>
+<p>In conclusion I quote from the celebrated Roman Catholic
+historian Thuanus. He states their tenets as follows: "That the
+church of Rome, because it renounced the true faith of Christ, WAS
+THE WHORE OF BABYLON ... that consequently <i>no obedience was to
+be paid to the Pope</i>, or to the bishops who maintain her errors;
+that a monastic life was the sink and dungeon of the church, the
+vows of which [relating to celibacy] were vain ... that the orders
+of the priesthood were marks of the great beast mentioned in the
+Apocalypse; that the fire of purgatory, the solemn mass, the
+consecration days of churches, the worship of saints, and
+propitiations for the dead, were the devices of Satan." Lib. VI,
+Sec. 16, Lib. XXVII. The chief offense of these so-called heretics
+seems to have been that they denounced the Pope as "Antichrist" and
+the apostate church of Rome as "the Babylonish harlot."</p>
+<a name="chap11-7" id="chap11-7"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>7. And when they shall have finished their testimony, the beast
+that ascendeth out of the bottomless pit shall make war against
+them, and shall overcome them, and kill them.</p>
+<p>8. And their dead bodies shall lie in the street of the great
+city, which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt, where also our
+Lord was crucified.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page201" name="page201"></a>[pg
+201]</span> <a name="chap11-9" id="chap11-9"></a>
+<p>9. And they of the people and kindreds and tongues and nations
+shall see their dead bodies three days and an half, and shall not
+suffer their dead bodies to be put in graves.</p>
+<p>10. And they that dwell upon the earth shall rejoice over them,
+and make merry, and shall send gifts one to another; because these
+two prophets tormented them that dwelt on the earth.</p>
+<a name="chap11-11" id="chap11-11"></a>
+<p>11. And after three days and an half the Spirit of life from God
+entered into them, and they stood upon their feet; and great fear
+fell upon them which saw them.</p>
+<p>12. And they heard a great voice from heaven saying unto them,
+Come up hither. And they ascended up to heaven in a cloud; and
+their enemies beheld them.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>At the expiration of the twelve hundred and sixty years the
+scene changes. The prophecy of the witnesses in their sackcloth
+state, hidden away from sight in the wilderness, ends, and they are
+now brought out into public view&mdash;but only to be killed. Their
+slaughter takes place at the hands of the beast. When we come to
+consider <a href="#chap13">chapter XIII</a>, we shall see that the
+Papacy is described as a beast reigning for forty-two months, or
+twelve hundred and sixty years, after which time another beast
+possessing great power and authority appears on the scene. This
+second beast is Protestantism, and through it the murder of the two
+witnesses at the close of the Papal supremacy in the vision before
+us was effected.</p>
+<p>It would seem, by the similarity of statement that the beast
+"ascendeth out of the bottomless pit," that the slaughter of the
+witnesses was effected by the Papal beast (chap. <a href=
+"#chap17-7">17:7, 8</a>); but the Mohammedan <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page202" name="page202"></a>[pg 202]</span>
+delusion also is said to have proceeded from "the bottomless pit."
+Chap. <a href="#chap9-1">9:1, 2</a>. The expression <i>bottomless
+pit</i> is doubtless used merely to signify the source of certain
+powers in contradistinction to the heavenly source from which
+others proceeded. Although the Papal beast is said to have
+originated in the bottomless pit, the second beast also doubtless
+proceeded from the same source, for he possessed many of the
+characteristics of the former, and caused the earth to worship the
+first beast, as explained in <a href="#chap13">chapter 13</a>. That
+he was not of heavenly origin is shown by the statement that he
+came up "out of the earth." Chap. <a href="#chap13-11">13:11</a>.
+But the direct proof that it was the Protestant beast, and not the
+Papal beast&mdash;although the same expression as to its origin is
+used concerning it&mdash;that slew the two witnesses, is found in
+the fact that the reign of the first, or Papal, beast was limited
+to forty two months (chap. <a href="#chap13-5">13:5</a>),
+corresponding to the twelve hundred and sixty years in which the
+witnesses prophesied in the vision before us; while it was after
+the <i>close</i> of this period, at the time when the second, or
+Protestant, beast arose (chap. <a href="#chap13-11">13:11</a>),
+that the witnesses were slain.</p>
+<p>To many this may seem a hard saying; but I request that the
+matter be given the most careful attention in the light of prophecy
+and divine truth. It is true that the Sixteenth Century Reformation
+at first brought the witnesses out of the wilderness of seclusion
+where they had remained during the long night of Romanism and
+exhibited them to the public view; but when thus placed upon
+exhibition, they were soon robbed entirely of their position as the
+Vicars, or Governors, of God's church. Since creed <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page203" name="page203"></a>[pg 203]</span> and
+sect-making first began, the Word and Spirit have not possesed
+governing power and authority in Protestantism; but men have
+usurped that place and prescribed authoritative rules of faith and
+practise for the people. The principles of Higher Criticism have so
+far pervaded the realm of sectarian theology that a vast number of
+the clergy no longer regard the Bible as the inspired word of God
+to man, but simply as a remarkable piece of religious literature
+recording the natural development of the religious consciousness
+among a peculiarly sensitive race of people. Protestantism
+certainly has placed the Bible on the dissecting table and
+dismembered it in a manner wholly unknown before. While Protestants
+will not for a moment allow the blessed Book to be hidden out of
+sight&mdash;put "into graves"&mdash;still they will not grant it
+that place it should occupy as the sole discipline of faith, so it
+is a dead letter to them. That all-glorious doctrine of Bible
+<i>unity</i>, which fills the whole New Testament, strikes a
+deathblow to all the carnal divisions and institutions of
+sectarianism; and so with one accord they unite in <i>fighting
+it</i>. "Oh, the good old blessed Bible! we could not do without
+it," say they; yet, as everybody knows, they are governed by the
+discipline and laws that they or their representatives have
+formulated. Thus, the Word and Spirit of God are brought under the
+public gaze, only to be treated with such indignity in God's sight,
+and killed; while infidels look on, and tauntingly remark, "Either
+the religion of to-day is no Christianity, or the Word of God is a
+lie."</p>
+<p>In the beginning of this dispensation the church of God not only
+consisted of all those who were spiritual, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page204" name="page204"></a>[pg 204]</span> but
+constituted a visible, organic body as well, made up of numerous
+local congregations that were separate in the management of their
+internal affairs, yet interrelated with each other, and were
+directed by humble pastors, who were, in reference to each other,
+<i>equal</i>. The Word of God was their only discipline, and the
+Spirit of God, their great Teacher and Guide. Thus, the two
+witnesses were active in their official position, in the public
+view, as the Vicars or Governors of the church of God on earth.
+When, however, men usurped the place of these Vicars by ignoring
+the Spirit and rejecting the Word and making their own rules of
+faith, the effect was a national hierarchy&mdash;the church of
+Rome, which for twelve hundred and sixty years stood in the public
+view. Yet the two witnesses were still alive, though driven into
+obscurity and "clothed in sackcloth"; for they still acted in their
+official position in the congregations of the medieval Christians
+already referred to, who resisted the doctrines of men and clung
+tenaciously to the simple, primitive form of church government and
+allowed the Spirit and Word authority supreme.</p>
+<p>But during the Protestant era Christians the world over became
+identified with the various sects, hence were representing to the
+world the beast power instead of the true church. Thus, during the
+Protestant period, the church of God, <i>in its organic form</i>,
+was not represented anywhere on earth; for its members were
+scattered among those who were "worshiping the beast and his
+image." Hence the two witnesses, during this era, had no place to
+operate in their official capacity as the Governors of God's church
+and are therefore represented as slain. The government of
+Protestant <span class="pagenum"><a id="page205" name=
+"page205"></a>[pg 205]</span> sects is not effected by the Word and
+Spirit; for the institutions themselves are of human origin, and
+men are their law-makers and governors.</p>
+<p>When the two witnesses are deprived of their governing power and
+the rules and disciplines of men substituted in their place, a
+decline into worldliness is the invariable result. This has been
+the case repeatedly in sectarianism. In fact, Protestantism, as a
+component part of that great city Babylon, has so given herself
+over to "revellings, banquetings, and abominable idolatries," that
+a voice from heaven has declared her to be "the habitation of
+devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of every
+unclean and hateful bird." Chap. <a href="#chap18-1">18:2</a>.
+Witness the shows, festivals, frolics, grab-bag parties, kissing
+bees, cake-walk lotteries, and other abominations unnumbered, that
+are carried on without shame, under the guise of religion, in the
+high places of this modern Babylon! If the Word of God with the
+full power and authority of his Spirit could be turned in upon
+them, it would be like the torment of fire; but no, it is dead to
+them, and they rejoice and make merry and continue in "the same
+excess of riot."</p>
+<p>In the description before us, this city of sectarianism in which
+the two witnesses are slain is "spiritually [or mystically] called
+Sodom and Egypt, where also our Lord was crucified." It is a
+mystical Sodom, Egypt and Jerusalem&mdash;a Sodom for wickedness
+and lewdness, an Egypt for the captivity and oppression of God's
+people, and a Jerusalem for the crucifying of the Son of God afresh
+and putting him to an open shame. Thus, this city mystically
+combines the wickedness of the three most wicked places on
+earth&mdash;Sodom, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page206" name=
+"page206"></a>[pg 206]</span> Egypt, and Jerusalem. These facts we
+shall notice more particularly hereafter.</p>
+<p>But these two witnesses were not always to remain trampled under
+foot in the streets of great Babylon; for a time came when "the
+spirit of life from God entered into them, and they stood upon
+their feet; and great fear fell upon them which saw them." In this
+is portrayed the reformation which is now taking place in the
+world. About the year A.D. 1880 God began to raise up holy men and
+women whom he commissioned to preach the everlasting gospel of the
+kingdom again; and they went forth in his name calling upon God's
+people everywhere to come "out of all places where they had been
+scattered in the cloudy and dark day" (Ezek. 34:12) and to take up
+their abode in the one true church of Jesus Christ, his body,
+independent of all sectarianism and the creeds and disciplines of
+men. In this assembly of the faithful, gathered out of all nations,
+no man nor set of men attempts to form laws or regulations for the
+supervision of spiritual affairs; but with one consent they humbly
+bow before the only true Lawgiver (Jas. 4:12), and say, "The
+government shall be upon his shoulder" (Isa. 9:6); and the Word and
+Spirit of God have perfect control of his saints. Halleluiah! They
+can preach, teach, and believe every word of truth placed in the
+Sacred Volume, without a conference or discipline of men
+forbidding. Standing upon this apostolic platform of eternal truth,
+they hurl the thunders of divine judgment against the hidden works
+of darkness, causing the graceless devotees of fallen Babylon to
+quake with fear and to "gnaw their tongues for pain."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page207" name="page207"></a>[pg
+207]</span>
+<p>After the resurrection of these witnesses, a voice from heaven
+is heard, saying, "Come up hither. And they ascended up to heaven
+in a cloud; and their enemies beheld them." This ascension to
+heaven in the presence of their enemies, which according to this
+chapter occurred before the end of time, has reference undoubtedly
+to their great exaltation. "Thy greatness is grown, and <i>reacheth
+unto heaven</i>." Dan. 4:22. We see that in this text a similar
+expression signifies great exaltation. So this work is destined to
+assume such proportions that the people of earth may have the
+privilege of seeing the truth. In the preceding chapter John, as a
+symbol of the church at this time, under the living ministry
+symbolized by the rain-bow angel, was told that he "must prophesy
+again before many peoples, and nations, and tongues, and kings."
+Verse 11.</p>
+<p>The signification of the time-period of three days and a half
+claims our attention next. According to the foregoing explanation,
+it will be seen that the writer applies it as three centuries and a
+half, or three hundred and fifty years&mdash;from A.D. 1530 to A.D.
+1880. It will be necessary to adduce strong reasons for thus
+applying it. In the first place, the time-prophecies of the Bible
+are by no means confined to the year-day manner of interpretation.
+Many times in the Old Testament the expression occurs, "And it
+shall come to pass <i>in that day</i>," which expression is
+admitted by all to have reference to the gospel day, or the entire
+gospel dispensation. When the church of Philadelphia was promised
+deliverance from the <i>hour</i> of temptation which was to come
+upon all the world (chap. <a href="#chap3-10">3:10</a>), no one
+supposes that a short <span class="pagenum"><a id="page208" name=
+"page208"></a>[pg 208]</span> period of only one week is specified.
+The rulers of the ten kingdoms were to "receive power as kings
+<i>one hour</i> with the beast" (chap. <a href=
+"#chap17-12">17:12</a>), which expression will be shown later to
+really cover many years. We might point out many such exceptions
+were it necessary.</p>
+<p>Again, it was the beast that came up at the expiration of the
+twelve hundred and sixty years, or Protestantism, that slaughtered
+the witnesses, and we could not expect their resurrection during
+the reign of Protestantism, which every one will admit was longer
+than three and one-half years, according to the year-day
+application. The events as they have developed prove that it was
+just three and one-half centuries before Protestantism was entirely
+ignored and the Spirit and Word recognized as the sole Governors in
+the church of God. Besides, the general trend of events following
+the formation of Protestantism naturally divide the succeeding
+centuries into separate periods. The first (sixteenth) was a fierce
+conflict for the establishment of Protestantism; the second
+(seventeenth) was a violent reaction, wherein the church of Rome
+nearly triumphed over her hated opposers; while the third
+(eighteenth) is specially noted in history as the period of
+infidelity or reason. This division of time was so noticable that
+D'Aubigne, who wrote about A.D. 1835, in his famous History of the
+Reformation, refers to it in the following remarkable language: "It
+has been said that the three last centuries, the sixteenth, the
+seventeenth, and the eighteenth, may be conceived as an immense
+battle of <i>three days'</i> duration. We willingly adopt this
+beautiful comparison.... The first day was the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page209" name="page209"></a>[pg 209]</span> battle
+of God, the second the battle of the priest, the third the battle
+of Reason. What will be the fourth? [1830-1930] In our opinion, the
+confused strife, the deadly contest of all these powers together,
+TO END IN THE VICTORY OF HIM TO WHOM TRIUMPH BELONGS." Book XI,
+Chap. 9.</p>
+<p>The writer is thankful to God that he is permitted to see the
+fourth day ending "in the victory of Him to whom triumph belongs."
+And may we, my brethren, be grateful to our dear Lord that it is
+our privilege to have part in this glorious reformation of divine
+truth that is now sweeping over the world and gathering the elect
+together for the soon-coming of the Savior.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>13. And the same hour was there a great earthquake, and the
+tenth part of the city fell, and in the earthquake were slain of
+men seven thousand: and the remnant were affrighted, and gave glory
+to the God of heaven.</p>
+<a name="chap11-14" id="chap11-14"></a>
+<p>14. The second woe is past; and, behold, the third woe cometh
+quickly.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>At the time the witnesses reach their greatest exaltation, a
+great earthquake takes place upon earth, and the tenth part of the
+city falls. The nature of the symbol would point us to some
+political upheaval. Since the great city of Babylon is composed of
+different divisions (as will be seen hereafter), it is a matter of
+doubt as to which part of the city is here referred to; but most
+probably that of the hierarchy as embraced in one of the ten
+divisions or kingdoms. Since the fulfilment of this prediction is
+yet future, I speak with hesitation and wait for the event to make
+all clear. It is probable, however, <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page210" name="page210"></a>[pg 210]</span> that either in this
+political revolution, or about that time, the Ottoman power will be
+overthrown; for immediately the announcement is made, "The second
+woe is past; and, behold, the third woe cometh quickly."</p>
+<a name="chap11-15" id="chap11-15"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>15. And the seventh angel sounded; and there were great voices
+in heaven, saying, The kingdoms of this world are become the
+kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign for
+ever and ever.</p>
+<p>16. And the four and twenty elders, which sat before God on
+their seats, fell upon their faces, and worshipped God,</p>
+<p>17. Saying, We give thee thanks, O Lord God Almighty, which art,
+and wast, and art to come; because thou hast taken to thee thy
+great power, and hast reigned.</p>
+<p>18. And the nations were angry, and thy wrath is come, and the
+time of the dead, that they should be judged, and that thou
+shouldest give reward unto thy servants the prophets, and to the
+saints, and them that fear thy name, small and great; and shouldest
+destroy them which destroy the earth.</p>
+<p>19. And the temple of God was opened in heaven, and there was
+seen in his temple the ark of his testament: and there were
+lightnings, and voices, and thunderings, and an earthquake, and
+great hail.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The seventh angel that here sounded is the third woe-angel, and
+according to the description before us, ushers in the general
+judgment. When the temple of God was opened that this mighty event
+might take place on earth, there were "lightnings, and voices, and
+thunderings, and an earthquake, and great hail." <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page211" name="page211"></a>[pg 211]</span>
+Wondrous commotions took place in the world, for kingdoms and
+empires were all overthrown, and Jesus Christ was the only king
+remaining, and his mission was to raise the dead that they might be
+judged, to give reward to the prophets and saints, and to banish
+with everlasting destruction those that corrupted the earth. The
+description itself is too plain to need further comment.</p>
+<p>"The temple of God" that was opened in heaven is to be
+understood as symbolical (as explained in chap. <a href=
+"#chap6-9">6:9</a>), and not literal. In other words, the heavenly
+world appeared to John symbolized after the sanctuary of the temple
+on earth. Chap. <a href="#chap15-5">15:5-8</a>; <a href=
+"#chap16-1">16:1</a>, <a href="#chap16-7">7</a>, <a href=
+"#chap16-17">17</a>, etc. This is proved clearly by the fact that,
+when the real heaven, the future home of the redeemed, is
+described, John says, "I saw <i>no temple</i> therein." Chap.
+<a href="#chap21-22">21:22</a>.</p>
+<p>Before dismissing the visions of this chapter, I wish to call
+attention to one more point hitherto referred to&mdash;that of
+parallelism and contrast. While we have the history of the church
+apostate described by the treading down of the holy city, we have
+also, in immediate contrast and running parallel therewith, a
+history of the true church existing during the same period of
+twelve hundred and sixty years, although it was in a sackcloth
+state. And while the reign of Protestantism is described as a
+period during which the two witnesses were in one sense dead, we
+have in immediate contrast a history of the last great reformation,
+in which the spirit of life from God again enters these same
+witnesses, and they stand upright on their feet, to the
+consternation of all their adversaries. Amen.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page212" name="page212"></a>[pg
+212]</span> <a name="chap12" id="chap12"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+<a name="chap12-1" id="chap12-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And there appeared a great wonder in heaven; a woman clothed
+with the sun, and the moon under her feet, and upon her head a
+crown of twelve stars:</p>
+<p>2. And she being with child cried, travailing in birth, and
+pained to be delivered.</p>
+<a name="chap12-3" id="chap12-3"></a>
+<p>3. And there appeared another wonder in heaven; and behold a
+great red dragon, having seven heads and ten horns, and seven
+crowns upon his heads.</p>
+<p>4. And his tail drew the third part of the stars of Heaven, and
+did cast them to the earth: and the dragon stood before the woman
+which was ready to be delivered, for to devour her child as soon as
+it was born.</p>
+<p>5. And she brought forth a man child, who was to rule all
+nations with a rod of iron: and her child was caught up unto God,
+and to his throne.</p>
+<p>6. And the woman fled into the wilderness, where she hath a
+place prepared of God, that they should feed her there a thousand
+two hundred and threescore days.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The three principal objects of this vision are the woman clothed
+with the sun, the man-child born of her, and a red dragon with
+seven heads and ten horns. These, being drawn from nature and human
+life, would point us both to the church and to the state for their
+fulfilment. The symbols, also, are living agents, and we should
+expect the objects they represent to be such.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page213" name="page213"></a>[pg
+213]</span>
+<p>This woman is an appropriate symbol of the church of God, which
+is composed of living, intelligent beings; and that it is the true
+and not an apostate one, is shown by the fact that upon her flight
+into the wilderness she had a place prepared of God where she was
+nourished for twelve hundred and sixty days. In a subsequent
+portion of the Apocalypse a vile harlot is taken as the
+representative of the church apostate. In this way a proper
+correspondence of character and quality is kept up. This woman
+appeared, not in the temple above, but in the firmament of heaven,
+where she was clothed with the sun, the moon under her feet, and
+upon her head a crown of twelve stars. Thus the brightest
+luminaries of heaven were gathered around her. Arrayed in this
+splendid manner, she is easily distinguished from an apostate
+church, which would not be so highly favored with such attire in
+this exalted position. Doubtless the objects with which she is
+adorned have some special signification. The moon is a fit symbol
+of the old covenant, above which the church had just risen, only to
+be clothed in the superior brightness and glory of the new
+covenant. And as the moon shines only with a borrowed light,
+obtaining its illumination from the sun; so, also, the old covenant
+was only a shadow of the good things to come and now stands
+eclipsed in the brightness and transcendant glory of that new and
+better dispensation. According to the explanation given of the
+seven stars in the right hand of Jesus (chap. <a href=
+"#chap1-19">1:19</a>), we are authorized to regard stars as a
+symbol of Christian ministers, and the twelve that appear most
+prominently in the first history of the church are the twelve
+apostles of the Lamb.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page214" name="page214"></a>[pg
+214]</span>
+<p>The dragon, a beast from the natural world, would properly
+symbolize a tyrannical, persecuting government. This was a red
+dragon with seven heads and ten horns, and seven crowns upon his
+heads. In the following chapter we read that John saw a beast
+rising up out of the sea with the same number of heads and horns,
+but ten crowns on his horns. And the dragon gave him (the beast)
+"his power, and his seat, and great authority." Verse 2. So far as
+the heads and horns are concerned, the only difference between the
+two is that the crowns&mdash;a symbol of supreme authority and
+power&mdash;have been transferred from the heads to the horns. In
+<a href="#chap17">chapter 17</a> John saw the same beast again and
+there received the following explanation of the seven heads: "And
+there are seven kings: five are fallen, and one is, and the other
+is not yet come; and when he cometh he must continue a short
+space." Verse 10. Concerning the horns he was told, "The ten horns
+which thou sawest are ten kings, which have received no kingdom as
+yet." Verse 12. With this explanation before us it will be easy to
+identify the dragon of chapter 12 and the beast of chapters
+<a href="#chap13">13</a> and <a href="#chap17">17</a> as the Roman
+empire, the first under the Pagan and the second under the Papal
+form. The seven heads signify the seven distinct forms of supreme
+government that ruled successively in the empire. The five that had
+already fallen when John received the vision were the Regal power,
+the Consular, the Decemvirate, the Military Tribunes and the
+Triumvirate. "One is"&mdash;the Imperial.<a id="footnotetag8" name=
+"footnotetag8"></a><a href="#footnote8"><sup>8</sup></a> The
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page215" name="page215"></a>[pg
+215]</span> identification of its seventh and last head we shall
+leave until later. The ten horns, or kingdoms, which had not yet
+arisen when the Revelation was given, were the ten minor kingdoms
+that grew out of the Western Roman empire during its decline and
+fall. The historian Machiard, in giving an account of these
+nations, and without any reference to the Bible or its prophecies,
+reckons ten kingdoms, as follows:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>1. The Ostrogoths in Maesia;<br />
+2. The Visigoths in Pannonia;<br />
+3. Sueves and Alans in Gascoigne and Spain;<br />
+4. Vandals in Africa;<br />
+5. Franks in France;<br />
+6. Burgundians in Burgundy;<br />
+7. Heruli and Turings in Italy;<br />
+8. Saxons and Anglis in Britain;<br />
+9. Huns in Hungary;<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page216" name="page216"></a>[pg
+216]</span> 10. Lombards, at first on the Danube, and afterwards in
+Italy.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote8" name=
+"footnote8"></a><b>Footnote 8:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag8">(return)</a>
+<p>The fact that commentators and historians differ in their
+enumeration of the forms of government that ruled in Rome is often
+a source of confusion to ordinary readers. Hence an explanation is
+necessary. Rome was first ruled by kings, and therefore the first
+form of government is designated by either the term <i>Kings</i> or
+the term <i>Regal Power</i>. Upon the expulsion of the kings and
+the formation of the republic, the royal power was entrusted to two
+men who held it for a year, and were called <i>consuls</i>. In
+times of great public danger the consuls were superseded by a
+special officer called a <i>dictator</i>, who had supreme power. As
+the early life of the republic was often threatened with grave
+dangers, Rome was often governed by a dictator; hence this form of
+government is sometimes called the Dictatorship. The third form was
+the <i>Decemviri</i>, a government by ten men, who compiled the
+twelve famous Tables of Laws. In 444 B.C. another change was made
+by the appointment of <i>Military Tribunes</i> (whose numbers
+varied) with consular power. These were frequently called
+<i>Consuls</i>. The fifth form was the <i>Triumvirate</i>, a
+government by three men. The sixth was the <i>Imperial</i>. Hence
+the different forms can be enumerated thus: 1. The Regal Power, or
+Kings. 2. Consula or Dictators. 3. Decemvirate. 4. Military
+Tribunes, Tribunes, or Consuls. 5. Triumvirate. 6. Imperial. The
+seventh form will be considered in another place. See remarks on
+chap. <a href="#chap17-7">17:7-11</a>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Other historians agree substantially with this. These kingdoms
+all arose within one hundred and seventy years. The dragon is
+described with the horns, although they were not now in existence
+and did not arise until nearly the time when the dragon became the
+beast; likewise, he is represented with seven heads, although he
+really possessed only one head at a time, and five had already
+fallen and one being yet to come. He is described with all the
+heads and horns he ever had or was to have.</p>
+<p>The tail of this dragon "drew the third part of the stars of
+heaven, and did cast them to the earth." Some people who have never
+learned the nature of symbolic language try to imagine such a
+literal creature as the one here described and picture in their
+minds what an awful thing it would be to see the third part of the
+stars falling to the earth. But real stars that are fixed or
+planetary never fall, and if they did, they would be as apt to fall
+in an opposite direction as toward the earth. Besides, if one
+should come tumbling down here, it would knock this world into
+oblivion. But with a knowledge of the proper use of symbols we can
+easily identify this dragon with the Roman empire under its Pagan
+form; and the casting down of the stars, which were doubtless used
+as symbols of ministers as in verse 1, signifies the warfare which
+this awful beast power waged against the church of God, in which
+her ministers were always a shining mark for the first persecution
+and suffered terribly for the cause they represented.</p>
+<p>The man-child is the next object that claims our <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page217" name="page217"></a>[pg 217]</span>
+attention. Some have supposed that it represented Jesus Christ in
+his first advent to the world. But this could not be; for Christ is
+never represented as being the offspring of the church, but, on the
+other hand, is declared to be its originator. Some, also, have
+supposed that it represented the church bringing forth Christ to
+the world in a spiritual sense. This, however, would be in direct
+conflict with the known laws of symbolic language. A visible,
+living, intelligent agent, such as this man-child evidently was,
+could not be the symbol of an invisible spiritual presence.
+Besides, it has been clearly shown that Christ always appears in
+his own person, unrepresented by another, from the fact that he can
+not be symbolized. It is clear that this child can not signify a
+single definite personage; for after he is caught up to God, there
+is still a remnant of the woman's seed left upon earth. See verse
+17.</p>
+<p>What, then, does the man-child signify? It symbolizes the mighty
+host of new converts or children that the early church by her
+earnest travail brought forth. The seeming incongruity that the
+church, or mother, and her children are alike only serves to
+establish the point in question when rightly understood. A child is
+of the same substance as its mother and is designed to perpetuate
+the race. So, also, the new-born babes in the church are just the
+same spiritually as those who are older, and are intended to
+perpetuate the church of God on earth. But this explanation of
+itself is not sufficient to entirely satisfy an inquiring mind, and
+the question is sure to be asked, Why was it necessary that the
+church of God in this dispensation should be represented by two
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page218" name="page218"></a>[pg
+218]</span> individuals&mdash;a woman and her son? I also will ask
+a question&mdash;Why, on the other hand, was it necessary that the
+great apostasy of this dispensation should be represented by the
+double-figure of a woman and her daughters? The answer to the
+latter question would readily be given&mdash;to symbolize two
+distinct phases of apostasy. So, also, it was necessary that a
+double-symbol, such as a woman and her son, should be chosen to set
+forth <i>two phases</i> of the church brought to view in this
+chapter. If but a single symbol were used, how could the church be
+thereby represented as continuing on earth and fleeing into the
+wilderness and at the same time be represented as "overcome,"
+persecuted to the death, and "caught up unto God and to his
+throne"? This double-phase of the church&mdash;the experience of
+the saints on earth and the reign of the martyrs in
+Paradise&mdash;will be made very clear to the reader hereafter. But
+it would be impossible to set forth these two phases under one
+symbol, and therefore two are chosen.</p>
+<p>There is also direct Scripture testimony on this point. "Before
+she travailed, she brought forth; before her pain came, she was
+delivered of a <i>man-child.</i> Who hath heard such a thing? who
+hath seen such things? Shall the earth be made to bring forth in
+one day? or shall a nation be born at once? For as soon as Zion
+travailed, she brought forth her children." Isa. 66:7, 8. According
+to Heb. 12:22, 23, this Zion, or Sion, referred to is the New
+Testament church, and the man-child that she is said to bring forth
+is interpreted by Isaiah as "a nation born at once." Such language
+perfectly describes the rapid increase in the Christian church on
+Pentecost and shortly afterward, <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page219" name="page219"></a>[pg 219]</span> when thousands were
+added in one day. According to the apostle Paul, the host of Jews
+and Gentiles reconciled unto God through Jesus Christ constituted
+"one new man" in Christ. Eph. 2:15. See also Gal. 3:28. R.V. This
+man-child was to rule all nations with a rod of iron. For an
+explanation of this rule see remarks on chapter <a href=
+"#chap2-26">2:26, 27</a>. The twelve hundred and sixty days will be
+referred to later.</p>
+<a name="chap12-7" id="chap12-7"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>7. And there was war in heaven: Michael and his angels fought
+against the dragon; and the dragon fought and his angels,</p>
+<p>8. And prevailed not; neither was their place found any more in
+heaven.</p>
+<a name="chap12-9" id="chap12-9"></a>
+<p>9. And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called
+the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: he was cast
+out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him.</p>
+<p>10. And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven, Now is come
+salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power
+of his Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which
+accused them before our God day and night.</p>
+<a name="chap12-11" id="chap12-11"></a>
+<p>11. And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the
+word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives unto the
+death.</p>
+<p>12. Therefore rejoice, ye heavens, and ye that dwell in them.
+Woe to the inhabiters of the earth and of the sea! for the devil is
+come down unto you, having great wrath, because he knoweth that he
+hath but a short time.</p>
+<a name="chap12-13" id="chap12-13"></a>
+<p>13. And when the dragon saw that he was cast unto the earth, he
+persecuted the woman which brought forth the man child.</p>
+<p>14. And to the woman were given two wings of a great eagle, that
+she might fly into the wilderness, into her place, where she is
+nourished <span class="pagenum"><a id="page220" name=
+"page220"></a>[pg 220]</span> for a time, and times, and half a
+time, from the face of the serpent.</p>
+<p>15. And the serpent cast out of his mouth water as a flood after
+the woman, that he might cause her to be carried away of the
+flood.</p>
+<p>16. And the earth helped the woman, and the earth opened her
+mouth, and swallowed up the flood which the dragon east out of his
+mouth.</p>
+<p>17. And the dragon was wroth with the woman, and went to make
+war with the remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of
+God, and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In this vision we have a series of events covering exactly the
+same period of time as that of the preceeding one; namely, a
+history of the church up to and including her flight into the
+wilderness, and of the same opposing dragon. In this description,
+however, the events are more perfectly detailed.</p>
+<p>Because this dragon was called the Devil and Satan, many have
+been led into the idea that it signified the Prince of darkness
+himself. But surely we could not suppose that Beelzebub has any
+such appearance as this dragon. The foregoing explanation
+concerning his heads and horns shows conclusively that the Pagan
+Roman empire is meant, and not Beelzebub. Why, then, was it called
+the Devil and Satan? Among the Hebrews the term <i>Satan</i> was
+frequently used in a very liberal sense and applied to different
+objects, signifying merely an adversary or opposer. According to
+Young's Analytical Concordance the Hebrew word for Satan is
+translated <i>adversary</i> in a number of texts, a few of which I
+will refer to. Num. 22:22: "And the angel of the Lord stood in the
+way for an <i>adversary</i> [Satan, Heb.] against him." Here an
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page221" name="page221"></a>[pg
+221]</span> angel of the Lord is called a Satan to Balaam. In 1
+Sam. 29:4 David is called an adversary (Heb. Satan) to the
+Philistines. In 2 Sam. 19:22 certain opposers are said to be
+adversaries (Satans, Heb.) unto David; while in 1 Kings 11:25 a
+certain man was said to be an adversary (Satan) to Israel all the
+days of Solomon. A number of other instances could be given if
+necessary. In the New Testament, also, the term <i>Satan</i> is
+sometimes used to signify merely an opposer. "But he turned, and
+said unto Peter, Get thee behind me, Satan." Mat. 16:23. In 1 Cor.
+10:20 Paul declares "that the things which the Gentiles sacrifice,
+they sacrifice to <i>devils</i>." Paganism stood as the great
+opposer of Christianity, hence was a Satan (adversary) unto it;
+while the apostle denominated its religious rites as devil-worship.
+I do not question the fact that the spirit of Beelzebub was
+manifested in the thing; but the dragon itself was the empire, as
+is proved by the heads and the horns. However, the Devil and the
+agency through which he works are often used interchangeably. Satan
+and the serpent in Eden stand in the same relation as do Satan, or
+Beelzebub, and Paganism in the New Testament; hence to bind
+Paganism was to bind the Devil and Satan in one important
+sense.</p>
+<p>The dragon would be a beast from the natural world (if such a
+creature actually existed) and as such could represent nothing more
+than a civil empire; but in the vision under consideration he is
+represented as accompanied by <i>angels</i> actuated by his spirit
+and defending his cause. By this combination of symbols is set
+forth the politico-religious system of the empire&mdash;a religion
+that denied the doctrine of the <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page222" name="page222"></a>[pg 222]</span> one exclusive God and
+the divinity of Jesus Christ. It was the religion of
+<i>infidelity</i>. It was the dragon as a false religious system
+that Christianity attacked, and not the State itself. The following
+quotation from Butler's Ecclesiastical History will show the
+relation of Christians to the empire:</p>
+<p>"The Romans were accustomed to tolerate all new religions if
+they took their place by the side of those already existing, and if
+they did not cast reproach upon them.... But Christianity, by its
+very nature exclusive in its claims ... was offensive to the Romans
+and to the State. A religion which cast contempt upon the religions
+and rites sanctioned by the laws, and endeavored to draw men away
+from them, seemed to express thereby contempt and hostility for the
+State itself. Hence Christianity was branded as a malignant
+superstition, and Christians spoken of as the enemies of the human
+race.... From the letter of Pliny to Trajan, it was evidently
+recorded as an <i>religio illicita</i>, and the mere fact of being
+a Christian was counted of itself a crime.... The exclusiveness of
+Christianity seemed also to place its disciples in a position of
+direct disloyalty to the emperors and the State. 'The emperor was
+ex-officio <i>Pontifex Maximus</i>; the gods were national. Cicero
+declares as a principle of legislation, that no one should be
+allowed to worship foreign gods, unless they were recognized by
+public statute. Maecenas thus counselled Augustas: Honor the gods
+according to the customs of your ancestors, and compel others to
+worship them. Hate and punish those who bring in strange gods.' As
+the Roman empire was founded on the absolutism of the State, and
+made nothing of personal <span class="pagenum"><a id="page223"
+name="page223"></a>[pg 223]</span> rights, Christianity, which
+first taught and acknowledged them, would be peculiarly offensive
+to the State. Moreover, the conscientious refusal of Christians to
+pay divine honor to the emperor and his statutes, and to take part
+in idolatrous ceremonies at public festivals ... and their constant
+assembling themselves together, brought them under the suspicion
+and obloquy of the emperors and the people." Pp. 49, 50.</p>
+<p>The dragon was stationed in the same heaven where the woman
+appeared. This signifies his exalted position in the world. While
+the dragon was in the height of his power and glory, Michael (Jesus
+Christ&mdash;Jude 9; 1 Thes. 4:16; John 5:28) and his followers
+appeared on the scene, and a fierce battle for supremacy ensued,
+resulting in the final victory of the hosts of Michael. That it was
+against the dragon as a religious system that the Christians fought
+is proved by the kind of weapons they employed. "And they overcame
+him by the <i>blood of the Lamb</i> and by the <i>word of their
+testimony</i>; and they loved not their lives unto the death."
+Christianity never sought to overturn the civil empire, but did
+with all the power of truth oppose the huge system of error
+sustained by it and gained such decisive victories that the cry was
+heard, "Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our
+God, and the power of his Christ; for the accuser of our brethren
+is cast down, which accused them before our God day and night." The
+Devil himself suffered a severe defeat when his favorite agents,
+the dragon and his followers, were cast down from their lofty
+position and Christianity was exalted instead. Says Butler: "The
+final victory of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page224" name=
+"page224"></a>[pg 224]</span> Christianity over heathenism and
+Judaism, and the mightiest empire of the ancient world, a victory
+gained without physical force, by the moral power of faith and
+perseverance, of faith and love, is one of the sublimest spectacles
+of history, and one of the strongest evidences of the divinity and
+indestructible life of our holy religion." P. 40.</p>
+<p>But the fact that many Christians lost their lives in this
+conflict (verse 11), insomuch that the man-child is represented as
+being caught up unto God (verse 5), shows that the dragon employed
+also the arm of civil power in his opposition to the growing truth.
+The rapid increase of Christianity, despite the violent opposition
+and persecution of the Pagan party, can be no better represented
+than by a quotation from the notable Apology of Tertullian, who
+wrote during the persecution by Septimus Severus, about the end of
+the second century.</p>
+<p>"Rulers of the Roman Empire," he begins, "you surely can not
+forbid the Truth to reach you by the secret pathway of a noiseless
+book. She knows that she is but a sojourner on the earth, and as a
+stranger finds enemies; and more, her origin, her dwelling-place,
+her hope, her rewards, her honors, are above. One thing, meanwhile,
+she anxiously desires of earthly rulers&mdash;not to be condemned
+unknown. What harm can it do to give her a hearing?... The outcry
+is that the State is filled with Christians; that they are in the
+fields, in the citadels, in the islands. The lament is, as for some
+calamity, that both sexes, every age and condition, even high rank,
+are passing over to the Christian faith.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page225" name="page225"></a>[pg
+225]</span>
+<p>"The outcry is a confession and an argument for our cause; for
+we are a people of yesterday, and yet we have filled every place
+belonging to you&mdash;cities, islands, castles, towns, assemblies,
+your very camp, your tribes, companies, palace, senate, forum. We
+leave to you your temples alone. We can count your armies: our
+numbers in a single province will be greater. We have it in our
+power, without arms and without rebellion, to fight against you
+with the weapon of a simple divorce. We can leave you to wage your
+wars alone. If such a multitude should withdraw into some remote
+corner of the world you would doubtless tremble at your own
+solitude, and ask, 'Of whom are we the governors?'</p>
+<p>"It is a human right that every man should worship according to
+his own convictions ... a forced religion is no religion at all....
+Men say that the Christians are the cause of every public disaster.
+If the Tiber rises as high as the city walls, if the Nile does not
+rise over the fields, if the heavens give no rain, if there be an
+earthquake, if a famine or pestilence, straightway they cry, Away
+with the Christians to the lion.... But go zealously on, ye good
+governors, you will stand higher with the people if you kill us,
+torture us, condemn us, grind us to the dust; your injustice is the
+proof that we are innocent. God permits us to suffer. Your cruelty
+avails you nothing.... The oftener you mow us down the more in
+number we grow; the blood of Christians is seed. What you call our
+obstinacy is an instructor. For who that sees it does not inquire
+for what we suffer? Who that inquires does not embrace our
+doctrines? <span class="pagenum"><a id="page226" name=
+"page226"></a>[pg 226]</span> Who that embraces them is not ready
+to give his blood for the fulness of God's grace?"</p>
+<p>Another writer has said: "The church in this period appears poor
+in earthly possessions and honors, but rich in heavenly grace, in
+world-conquering faith and love and hope; unpopular, even outlawed,
+hated and persecuted, yet far more vigorous and expansive than the
+philosophies of Greece, or the empire of Rome; composed chiefly of
+persons of the lower social ranks, yet attracting the noblest and
+deepest minds of the age, and bearing in her bosom the hope of the
+world; conquering by apparent defeat and growing on the blood of
+her martyrs; great in deeds, greater in sufferings, greatest in
+death for the honor of Christ and the benefit of generations to
+come."</p>
+<p>This triumph of early Christianity over Paganism was a theme
+worthy of the song. "Now is come salvation, and strength, and the
+kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ." Even before the
+death of the apostles, according to the younger Pliny, the temples
+of the gods in Asia Minor were almost forsaken. No wonder, then,
+that even the inhabitants of heaven were called upon to rejoice at
+so great a victory attained by the followers of the Lamb. But the
+same voice also says, "Woe to the inhabiters of the earth and of
+the sea! for the devil is come down unto you, having great wrath,
+because he knoweth that he hath but a short time." This represents
+the violence of the Pagan party upon its defeat, being exasperated
+to the exercise of greater opposition and cruelty wherever the
+means and the power were still in their hands. Cast down from his
+exalted position in the heavens&mdash;the religious
+sphere&mdash;his ecclesiastical <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page227" name="page227"></a>[pg 227]</span> prestige lost, he had
+no place to abide but in the earth&mdash;the political
+kingdom&mdash;whence he took up arms, and "woe to the inhabitants
+of the earth." But "the days of Paganism in the empire were
+numbered." The Devil knew that he had but a short time, therefore
+he came down in great wrath. This is in accordance with the facts
+of history. Paganism did not die an easy death, but struggled hard
+and long.</p>
+<p>When cast from his high position, however, the dragon
+"persecuted the woman which brought forth the man-child." The true
+idea expressed in the original is that he <i>pursued</i> the woman,
+and this signification is indicated by what follows&mdash;"To the
+woman were given two wings of a great eagle, that she might fly
+into the wilderness, into her place, where she is nourished for a
+time, and times, and half a time, from the face of the serpent."
+The <i>time</i> as a definite period signifies one year; hence a
+time, times, and half a time would be three and one-half years, or
+twelve hundred and sixty days, as before explained. There is an
+apparent incongruity or contradiction of statement in reference to
+the symbols here; but it is a contradiction that when rightly
+understood throws light upon the whole subject. It will be noticed
+that the woman and Michael with his angels symbolize the same
+object&mdash;the people of God. Under the latter figure they were
+triumphant and the dragon was defeated. Yet after he was cast down,
+he turned upon the woman and pursued her, and thus, the church
+appeared to be the defeated party. According to this, then, the
+Pagan party is represented as <i>prevailing</i> soon after he met
+<i>defeat</i> and the church apparently <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page228" name="page228"></a>[pg 228]</span>
+<i>defeated</i> soon after her period of <i>triumph</i>. Here again
+we have two separate symbols of the same object in order to
+represent two of its different phases.</p>
+<p>This is explained satisfactorily by noticing carefully the
+facts. The woman, who is always the true church composed of holy
+people, was at first identical with the visible church, or the
+great body of Christians, and in this condition was successful in
+spreading the pure gospel and casting down the powers of iniquity
+symbolized by the dragon. But the dragon politically, as symbolized
+by his being a beast from the natural world, with heads and horns,
+remained in power for some time, his religious prestige only being
+lost. Christianity did not attempt to cast down the dragon in the
+sense of destroying the civil empire. As is well known, a great
+spiritual declension followed the period of the church's greatest
+triumph, which decline drove the woman, or the true church, into
+the wilderness; hence to all appearances the church became a
+defeated party. About this same time, the dying cause of Paganism
+revived for a season in terrible severity in the latter part of the
+third century; hence to all appearances the dragon was triumphant.
+This supreme effort of Paganism's to regain its former position
+will be better understood in connection with what follows regarding
+the flood which he cast out of his mouth. But that the dragon was
+not permanently triumphant is shown by the fact that he afterwards
+resigned his power and position unto the beast. Chap. <a href=
+"#chap13-1">13:2</a>.</p>
+<p>As to the meaning of the "two wings of a great eagle" given the
+woman to aid her in her flight, I am not able to say positively.
+Some apply them to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page229" name=
+"page229"></a>[pg 229]</span> "the grace and providence of God
+which watched over the church"; others to the "spiritual gifts of
+faith, love," etc., which, like supporting wings, bore the church
+above her enemies. But I can not see how the wings of a great eagle
+can properly symbolize such things. They are not drawn from the
+right source. Perhaps nothing more is intended by the wings than to
+denote the fact of her successful flight. That this idea is the
+correct one seems quite clear when we consider the fact that the
+remarkable deliverance of the Israelites from Egyptian bondage is
+set forth under the same figure, that of eagles' wings. "Ye have
+seen what I did unto the Egyptians, and how <i>I bare you on
+eagles' wings</i>, and brought you unto myself." Ex. 19:4. With the
+wings of such a powerful bird she was able to escape, so that the
+dragon could not overtake her.</p>
+<p>"And the serpent cast out of his mouth water as a flood after
+the woman, that he might cause her to be carried away of the flood.
+And the earth helped the woman, and the earth opened her mouth, and
+swallowed up the flood which the dragon cast out of his mouth."
+Here is a peculiar combination of symbols from different
+departments&mdash;the serpent, a flood of water, the woman, and the
+earth. The last two as allies is a very unusual circumstance. Some
+refer the flood of waters to heresies that arose in, or was
+connected with, the hierarchy about this time; but in that case how
+could it be said that it was the serpent that cast it out? Others
+apply it to errors that the Pagan party introduced baptized with
+the name of Christianity, when they professed to become converts at
+a later period. It is certainly an appropriate <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page230" name="page230"></a>[pg 230]</span>
+<i>figure of speech</i> to say a flood of error or of false
+doctrine; but whether a flood of water is a proper <i>symbol</i> of
+the same is another question. I do not think it is. Water, being an
+object of nature, would point us to something political. False
+doctrines are usually symbolized by something different from
+objects in nature.</p>
+<p>There is considerable difficulty in verifying the symbol, but I
+will submit what up to the present has seemed to me as the most
+satisfactory explanation. It appears from the description that this
+was about the last great public effort the dragon made to overwhelm
+the church and that he was exasperated to this supreme effort by
+the humiliating defeat he had suffered. The means he employed was
+<i>water</i>, an object of nature; hence we are to look for some
+great political event by which the dragon made his master-effort to
+destroy the woman shortly after her flight into the wilderness. In
+A.D. 284 Diocletian, a Pagan, succeeded to the imperial throne.
+Before the close of his reign (305), the Christians suffered the
+most terrible persecution ever received at the hands of Pagan Rome.
+It continued ten years&mdash;A.D. 302-312. It was the design of
+this emperor to completely extirpate the very name of Christianity,
+and his unfortunate victims were slain by the thousands throughout
+the empire. "But the master-piece of [his] heathen policy was the
+order to seek and burn all copies of the Word of God. Hitherto the
+enemy had been lopping off the branches of the tree whose leaves
+were for the healing of the nations; now the blow was made at the
+root. It had once been the policy of Antiochus Epiphanes, when he
+madly sought <span class="pagenum"><a id="page231" name=
+"page231"></a>[pg 231]</span> to destroy the Jewish Scriptures. It
+was both wise and wicked. It had but one defect, it could not be
+carried into complete execution. The sacred treasure was in too
+many hands, and too many of its guardians were brave and prudent,
+to make extermination possible. An African bishop said, 'Here is my
+body, take it, burn it; but I will not deliver up the Word of God.'
+A deacon said, 'Never, sir, never! Had I children I would sooner
+deliver them to you than the divine word.' He and his wife were
+burnt together." Butler's Eccl. History, p. 66.</p>
+<p>But "<i>the earth</i> helped the woman"&mdash;another
+unlooked-for political event. Worn out with the cares of State,
+boasting that the very name of Christ was abolished, and dying with
+a loathsome disease, the tyrant abdicated his throne. A number of
+individuals claimed imperial honors; but Constantine, the ruler of
+Gaul, Spain, and Britain, fought his way against contending rivals
+and finally entered Rome, the capital, in triumph. Enthroned as
+emperor of the West, he immediately issued an edict of toleration
+favorable to the Christians (A.D. 313) and soon became a professed
+Christian himself and by law made Christianity the established
+religion of the empire. In 324, having crushed all rivals, he
+became sole emperor of the Roman world, and with a view of
+promoting Christianity convened what is known as the First General
+Council of the Church, at Nicaea in Asia Minor, A.D. 325. The
+prestige of Paganism as a religious power had been overthrown long
+before by the followers of Christ, but now its political importance
+received a death-blow, only a few expiring struggles appearing
+subsequently before the final <span class="pagenum"><a id="page232"
+name="page232"></a>[pg 232]</span> downfall of Western Rome. Thus,
+the earth helped the woman and swallowed up the flood of
+persecution which the dragon cast out.</p>
+<p>"And the dragon was wroth with the woman, and went to make war
+with the remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of God,
+and have the testimony of Jesus." Finding that he could not destroy
+or exterminate the church of God, he determined to make war upon
+its individual members.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page233" name="page233"></a>[pg
+233]</span> <a name="chap13" id="chap13"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+<a name="chap13-1" id="chap13-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And I stood upon the sand of the sea, and saw a beast rise up
+out of the sea, having seven heads and ten horns, and upon his
+horns ten crowns, and upon his heads the name of blasphemy.</p>
+<a name="chap13-2" id="chap13-2"></a>
+<p>2. And the beast which I saw was like unto a leopard, and his
+feet were as the feet of a bear, and his mouth as the mouth of a
+lion: and the dragon gave him his power, and his seat, and great
+authority.</p>
+<p>3. And I saw one of his heads as it were wounded to death; and
+his deadly wound was healed: and all the world wondered after the
+beast.</p>
+<p>4. And they worshipped the dragon which gave power unto the
+beast: and they worshipped the beast, saying, Who is like unto the
+beast? who is able to make war with him?</p>
+<a name="chap13-5" id="chap13-5"></a>
+<p>5. And there was given unto him a mouth speaking great things
+and blasphemies; and power was given unto him to continue forty and
+two months.</p>
+<p>6. And he opened his mouth in blasphemy against God, to
+blaspheme his name, and his tabernacle, and them that dwell in
+heaven.</p>
+<a name="chap13-7" id="chap13-7"></a>
+<p>7. And it was given unto him to make war with the saints, and to
+overcome them: and power was given him over all kindreds, and
+tongues, and nations.</p>
+<a name="chap13-8" id="chap13-8"></a>
+<p>8. And all that dwell upon the earth shall worship him, whose
+names are not written in the book of life of the Lamb slain from
+the foundation of the world.</p>
+<p>9. If any man have an ear, let him hear.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page234" name="page234"></a>[pg
+234]</span> <a name="chap13-10" id="chap13-10"></a>
+<p>10. He that leadeth into captivity shall go into captivity: he
+that killeth with the sword must be killed with the sword. Here is
+the patience and the faith of the saints.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In this vision John beheld a beast rise out of the sea. His
+appearance&mdash;like that of a leopard with the feet of a bear and
+a mouth like a lion&mdash;indicated that he was some terrible
+creature. He was also a persecutor of the saints, the same as the
+dragon that preceded him. As before explained, this beast, also,
+symbolizes the Roman empire; for he possesses the same heads and
+horns as the dragon, the only difference being that the supreme
+power and authority, as indicated by the crowns, is now vested in
+the ten horns, or minor kingdoms, instead of in the seven heads.
+The dragon as a political power represented Rome before her
+overthrow by the barbarians; the beast as a political power
+represents new Rome.</p>
+<p>A careful study of the characteristics of this beast, however,
+will show that he represents more than a civil power. As a mere
+beast from the natural world he could symbolize nothing more than
+some political power; but it will be noticed that, combined with
+his beastly nature, there are also certain characteristics that
+belong exclusively to the department of human life&mdash;a mouth
+<i>speaking</i> great things; power to magnify himself against the
+God of heaven; the ability to single out the saints of God and kill
+them, and to set himself up as an object to be worshiped, etc. This
+combination of symbols from the two departments&mdash;those of
+animal and of human life&mdash;points us with absolute certainty to
+Rome as a politico-religious <span class="pagenum"><a id="page235"
+name="page235"></a>[pg 235]</span> system. Ask any historian what
+world-wide power succeeded Rome Pagan, and he will answer at once,
+"Rome Papal."</p>
+<p>While it is not my general design to explain the many lines of
+prophetic truth described under similar symbols in other parts of
+the Bible, yet I will ask the reader here to pardon the slight
+digression while I call attention briefly to a few thoughts in the
+seventh chapter of Daniel regarding this same Papal power.</p>
+<p>Daniel received a vision of four great beasts, which were
+interpreted to symbolize four universal monarchies. Verse 17. These
+were the Babylonian, the Medo-Persian, the Greco-Macedonian, and
+the Roman. The fourth beast possessed ten horns, which were
+explained to signify ten kingdoms to arise out of the fourth
+empire. This is identical with the dragon of Rev. 12, except the
+latter possessed seven heads not mentioned by Daniel. In the midst
+of the ten horns (ten minor kingdoms) grew up a <i>little</i> horn,
+which soon assumed greater proportions than his fellows, taking the
+place of three of the original horns, and into his hand the saints
+of the Most High were given for "a time and times and the dividing
+of time," or twelve hundred and sixty years. This eleventh horn
+differed from the ten in that it possessed a mouth speaking great
+things, and the eyes of a man. A horn with eyes and mouth in it is
+a very unusual thing, yet it is just such a combination as we might
+expect when we possess a correct knowledge of symbols. Being drawn
+from two departments&mdash;human life and animal life&mdash;this
+double-symbol directs us to a politico-religious system that came
+up among the ten <span class="pagenum"><a id="page236" name=
+"page236"></a>[pg 236]</span> horns that grew out of the old Roman
+empire. We instantly identify it with the growing Papacy, which
+arose to a position of great authority in conjunction with the new
+Roman empire.</p>
+<p>Three of the horns, or temporal kingdoms, were overthrown in
+order to give room for the complete development of this
+politico-religious power. Since great changes have frequently
+occurred among the nations of Europe originally embraced in the ten
+minor kingdoms, different powers have been referred to as the three
+described in Daniel's prophecy; but the most satisfactory
+explanation to my mind is that of the three kingdoms in Italy that
+were overthrown as if to give the hierarchy room for development,
+and that gave the Papacy its <i>first</i> temporal sovereignty,
+thus completing the symbol by constituting her a civil as well as
+an ecclesiastical horn.</p>
+<p>Odoacer, in A.D. 476, overthrew the old empire of the West and
+established the kingdom of the Heruli in Italy. Seventeen years
+later it was subverted by Theodoric, who established the kingdom of
+the Ostrogoths, which continued sixty years; then it, in turn, was
+overthrown by Belisarius, but was soon succeeded by the Lombards.
+The Lombard kingdom was subverted by Pepin and Charlemagne, who, as
+champions of the church, gave a large part of their dominions to
+the See of Rome and thus favored the Papacy with her first temporal
+power. Thus were the kingdoms of the Heruli, Ostrogoths, and
+Lombards plucked up by the roots upon the very territory occupied
+first by the Papacy as a temporal power, and as if to give it
+room.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page237" name="page237"></a>[pg
+237]</span>
+<p>The careful student of Daniel 7 will notice immediately the
+striking similarity between the politico-religious system
+symbolized by the little horn and the leopard beast of Revelation
+13 under consideration. The following parallels between them prove
+their identity:</p>
+<p>"1. The little horn was a blasphemous power: 'He shall speak
+great words against the Most High.' Dan. 7:25. The leopard beast of
+Rev. 13:6 does the same: 'He opened his mouth in blasphemy against
+God.'</p>
+<p>"2. The little horn made war with the saints, and prevailed
+against them. Dan. 7:21. This beast also, Rev. 13:7, makes war with
+the saints, and overcomes them.</p>
+<p>"3. The little horn had a mouth speaking great things. Dan. 7:8,
+20. And of this beast we read, Rev. 13:5: 'And there was given unto
+him a mouth speaking great things and blasphemies.'</p>
+<p>"4. The little horn rose on the cessation of the Pagan form of
+the Roman empire. This beast rises at the same time; for the
+dragon, Pagan Rome, gives him his power, his seat, and great
+authority.</p>
+<p>"5. Power was given to the little horn to continue for a time,
+times, and the dividing of time, or twelve hundred and sixty years.
+Dan. 7:25. To this beast also power was given for forty and two
+months, or twelve hundred and sixty years. Rev. 13:5.</p>
+<p>"6. At the end of the twelve hundred and sixty years the
+universal dominion of the little horn was to begin to decline,
+being consumed and destroyed unto the end. Dan. 7:26. This beast,
+also, Rev. 13:10, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page238" name=
+"page238"></a>[pg 238]</span> was to be led into captivity and
+'killed with the sword.'"</p>
+<p>These points prove identity. To quote the words of a certain
+expositor: "When we have in prophecy two symbols ... representing
+powers that come upon the stage of action at the <i>same time</i>,
+occupy the <i>same territory</i>, maintain the <i>same
+character</i>, do the <i>same work</i>, exist the <i>same length of
+time</i>, and meet the same <i>fate</i>, those symbols represent
+the same <i>identical power</i>." To this all must agree. Hence we
+have in the vision before us a description of Papal Rome in her
+two-fold character as a temporal and a religious power. The
+wounding and healing of the head of the beast will be explained in
+<a href="#chap17">chapter XVII</a>.</p>
+<p>How the same heads and horns can serve both the dragon and the
+leopard beast will be better understood later. For the present it
+will be sufficient to state that it is because they are the same
+beast in reality, being clothed, in its later form, in a Christian
+garb, instead of the worn-out garments of infidelity or heathenism
+possessed by the former. This transfer is expressed in the
+following words: "And the dragon gave him his power, and his seat,
+and great authority." Verse 2. This beast, then, succeeded to the
+dominion held by the dragon. It was like an old, established firm
+retiring and giving its standing and credit and well-earned
+reputation to a new partnership, to conduct a similar business.</p>
+<p>While this beast, as before observed, represents the developed
+religious and political power of the Papacy combined, still the
+actions ascribed to it show plainly that it is in its character as
+an <i>ecclesiastical</i> beast that <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page239" name="page239"></a>[pg 239]</span> its terrible features
+are here delineated. No one would suppose that a mere political
+power would set itself up as an object to be worshiped, exalting
+itself above the God of heaven, and then single out and slaughter
+the saints for not complying therewith. As far as rendering
+obedience to civil governments is concerned, the Christians of all
+ages have been the most peaceful and obedient servants of all. So
+we shall hereafter refer always to the <i>beast</i> as an
+ecclesiastical power, unless otherwise stated.</p>
+<p>This beast all the world admired. "And they worshiped the dragon
+which gave power unto the beast: and they worshiped the beast,
+saying, Who is like unto the beast? who is able to make war with
+him?" The people worshiped the established hierarchy, and they also
+worshiped the dragon from which the beast obtained so much of his
+power. The expression "<i>worshiped</i> the dragon" shows plainly
+that it is the dragon as a religious system that is referred to,
+and not the old civil empire. How, then, could the old heathen
+worship be perpetuated in the church of Rome and form a part of her
+religious services? By adopting rites and ceremonies purely Pagan
+in their origin. Since I have already stated that the beast and the
+dragon as temporal powers were about the same in reality, except
+the change of sovereignty from the heads to the horns, it will now
+be necessary to show the remarkable similarity in spirit that
+existed between them as religious powers, the one being the
+successor of the other.</p>
+<p>1. The high-priest of the Pagan religions was called Pontifex
+Maximus, and he claimed spiritual and temporal authority over the
+affairs of men. The <span class="pagenum"><a id="page240" name=
+"page240"></a>[pg 240]</span> Pope of Rome possesses the same title
+and makes the same claims, and he is clad in the same attire as the
+Pagan Pontiff.</p>
+<p>2. The heathen were accustomed to wear scapulars, medals, and
+images to shield them from the common ills and dangers of life.
+Romanists wear the same and for the same purpose.</p>
+<p>3. The Pagans, by an official process called <i>deification</i>,
+frequently exalted men who had lived among them to a position
+worthy of special honor and worship. Papists, by a similar process
+called <i>canonisation</i>, raise their former men of prominence to
+the dignity of <i>saints</i> and then offer up prayers to them.</p>
+<p>The foregoing practises are derived from Paganism; also from
+Judaism or Paganism came their practise of burning incense in
+public worship, the use of holy water, burning wax candles in the
+daytime, and votive gifts and offerings. Other heathen principles
+are:</p>
+<p>4. Adoration of idols and images, a practise expressly forbidden
+by the Mosaic law and unsanctioned by primitive Christianity;</p>
+<p>5. Road gods and saints (in Catholic countries);</p>
+<p>6. Processions of worshipers and self-whippers (especially in
+Catholic countries);</p>
+<p>7. Religious orders of monks and nuns. One who has read of the
+vestal virgins of old will recognize at once where monkery
+originated.</p>
+<p>In the city of Rome there still stands an old heathen temple
+built by Marcus Agrippa and dedicated in the year B.C. 27 to <i>all
+the gods</i>. In the year A.D. 610 it was reconsecrated by Pope
+Boniface IV. to "the blessed Virgin and all the saints." From that
+time until the present day Romanists in the same temple
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page241" name="page241"></a>[pg
+241]</span> have prostrated themselves before <i>the very same
+images</i> and have devoutly emplored them by the same forms of
+prayer and for the very same purposes as did the heathen of old.
+The only difference is, that instead of calling this idol Jupiter,
+they call it Paul; instead of denominating that one Venus, they
+call it Mary, etc. Well has Bowling said: "The scholar, familiar as
+he is with the classic descriptions of ancient mythology, when he
+directs his attention to the ceremonies of Papal worship, can not
+avoid recognizing their close resemblance, if not their absolute
+identity. The temples of Jupiter, Diana, Venus or Apollo, their
+'altars smoking with incense,' their boys in sacred habits, holding
+the incense box, and attending upon the priests, their holy water
+at the entrance of the temples, with their <i>aspergilla</i>, or
+sprinkling-brushes, their thuribula, or vessels of incense, their
+ever-burning lamps before the statues of their deities, are
+irresistibly brought before his mind, whenever he visits a Roman
+Catholic place of worship, and witnesses precisely the same
+things." History of Romanism, pp. 109, 110.</p>
+<p>Having failed in his direct attacks against the Christian
+church, with the accession of Constantine, who established
+Christianity as the State religion, the dragon soon clothed his
+pernicious principles in a Christian garb and made war against the
+remnant of the woman's seed that kept the commandments of God,
+through the rising hierarchy, under the name of Christianity; but
+his heads and horns being visible, and he being unable to control
+his tongue, his real sentiments crop out, and he is easily
+identified. It is <span class="pagenum"><a id="page242" name=
+"page242"></a>[pg 242]</span> not to be supposed, however, that the
+beast would appear suddenly in full possession of the immense power
+ascribed to him in this chapter. On the contrary, Daniel represents
+it as a <i>little</i> horn at first, whose look finally became
+"more stout than his fellows." Dan. 7:8, 20. Such ecclesiastical
+power was attained only by the process of gradual development.
+According to the vision his universal power was limited to "forty
+and two months," or twelve hundred and sixty years. Since this has
+reference to the beast as an ecclesiastal power, which according to
+Daniel grew up by degrees, the time should be calculated the same
+as in chapter <a href="#chap11-2">11:2, 3</a>&mdash;dated from the
+time when the external, visible church was wholly in the hands of
+the profane multitude of Gentiles and the true church crowded into
+the wilderness. The nationalized hierarchy, however, continued to
+advance to greater degrees of power over the nations, until it
+reached its zenith under the pontificate of Gregory VII., A.D.
+1073-1080.</p>
+<p>The great things and blasphemies spoken by this beast are
+doubtless fulfilled by the prerogatives and rights belonging to God
+alone which this apostate church, especially through her regularly
+constituted head, claims. In fact, the Pope is the real mouth of
+this beast, the one who dictates her laws with great authority. He
+claims to be the vicar of Christ on earth and supreme head of the
+church, even, as in the case of Pope Innocent, denominating himself
+the one before whom every knee must bow, of things in heaven, and
+things on earth, and things under the earth. He claims power over
+the souls of all men on earth and even after their departure from
+earth. If <span class="pagenum"><a id="page243" name=
+"page243"></a>[pg 243]</span> this is not blasphemy against God,
+his tabernacle, or church, and "them that dwell in heaven," then I
+am wholly unable to imagine what would fulfil the prediction. Among
+the blasphemous titles assumed are these: Lord God the Pope, King
+of the World, Holy Father, King of kings, and Lord of lords,
+Vicegerent of the Son of God. He claims infallibility (which was
+backed up by the Ecumenical council of 1870) and has for ages.
+Further, he claims power to dispense with God's laws, to forgive
+sins, to release from purgatory, to damn, and to save.</p>
+<p>All the inhabitants of the earth were to worship him, except
+those whose names were in the book of life. Thank God that even
+during the dark age of Romanism a people existed who were owned by
+the Lord and who refused to render idolatrous worship to this
+tyrannical beast. For further information regarding these medieval
+Christians, see remarks on chapter <a href="#chap11-3">11:3</a>.
+But these saints who opposed the Papal assumptions were made the
+object of fearful persecutions, until Rome glutted herself upon the
+blood of millions of God's holy saints. This will be more fully
+described in <a href="#chap17">chapter 17</a>, where this apostate
+church appears under another symbol, "drunken with the blood of the
+saints, and with the blood of the martyrs of Jesus." In all their
+severe trials, however, they were comforted with the knowledge that
+Justice would not always sleep, but that a time would come when her
+retributive hand would be stretched forth to lead into captivity
+their persecuting enemies and break their world-wide reign of
+tyranny and usurpation. "Here is the patience and the faith of the
+saints." To a number of people God <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page244" name="page244"></a>[pg 244]</span> gave special foresight
+of the coming reformation of the sixteenth century, in which the
+universal spiritual supremacy of the Papacy ended. A few of the
+many examples will be profitable.</p>
+<p>Says D'Aubigne: "John Huss preached in Bohemia a century before
+Luther preached in Saxony. He seems to have penetrated deeper than
+his predecessors into the essence of Christian truth. He prayed to
+Christ for grace to glory only in his cross, and in the inestimable
+humiliation of his sufferings.... He was, if we may be allowed the
+expression, the John Baptist of the reformation. The flames of his
+pile kindled a fire in the church that cast a brilliant light into
+the surrounding darkness, and whose glimmerings were not to be so
+readily extinguished. John Huss did more: prophetic words issued
+from the depths of his dungeon. He foresaw that a real reformation
+of the church was at hand. When driven out of Prague and compelled
+to wander through the fields of Bohemia, where an immense crowd
+followed his steps and hung upon his words, he had cried out: 'The
+wicked have begun by preparing a treacherous snare for a goose. But
+if even the goose, which is only a domestic bird, a peaceful
+animal, and whose flight is not very far in the air, has
+nevertheless broken through their toils, other birds, soaring more
+boldly towards the sky, will break through them with still greater
+force. Instead of a feeble goose, the truth will send forth eagles
+and keen-eyed vultures.' This prediction was fulfilled by the
+reformers.</p>
+<p>"When the venerable priest had been summoned by Sigismund's
+order before the Council of Constance, and had been thrown into
+prison, the chapel of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page245" name=
+"page245"></a>[pg 245]</span> Bethlehem, in which he had proclaimed
+the gospel and the future triumphs of Christ, occupied his mind
+much more than his own defence. One night the holy martyr saw in
+imagination, from the depths of his dungeon, the pictures of Christ
+which he had painted on the walls of his oratory, effaced by the
+Pope and his bishops. This vision distressed him; but on the next
+day he saw many painters occupied in restoring these figures in
+greater number and in brighter colors. As soon as the task was
+ended, the painters, who were surrounded by an immense crowd,
+exclaimed, 'Now let the popes and bishops come! they shall never
+efface them more!' And many people rejoiced in Bethlehem, and I
+with them, adds John Huss. 'Busy yourself with your defence rather
+than with your dreams,' said his faithful friend, the Knight of
+Chlum, to whom he had communicated this vision. 'I am no dreamer,'
+replied Huss, 'but I maintain this for certain, that the image of
+Christ will never be effaced. They have wished to destroy it, but
+it shall be painted afresh in all hearts by much better preachers
+than myself. The nation that loves Christ will rejoice at this. And
+I, awaking from the dead, and rising so to speak, from my grave,
+shall leap with great joy.'" History of the Reformation, Book I,
+Chap. 6.</p>
+<p>This bold witness for Christ was burned at the stake July 6,
+1415, by order of the General Council of Constance. When the fagots
+were piled up around him ready for the torch, he said to the
+executioner, "You are now going to burn a goose [Huss signifying
+goose in the Bohemian language]; but in a century you will have a
+swan whom you can neither roast nor boil." <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page246" name="page246"></a>[pg 246]</span> Fox's
+Book of Martyrs. This was fulfilled in Martin Luther.</p>
+<p>Henry Institorus, an inquisitor, uttered these remarkable words:
+"'All the world cries out and demands a council, but there is no
+human power that can reform the church by a council. The Most High
+will find other means, which are at present unknown to us, although
+they may be at our very doors, to bring back the church to its
+pristine condition.' This remarkable prophecy, delivered by an
+inquisitor at the very period of Luther's birth, is the best
+apology for the reformation."</p>
+<p>Andrew Proles, provincial of the Augustines, used often to say:
+"Whence, then, proceeds so much darkness and such horrible
+superstitions? O my brethren! Christianity needs a bold and a great
+reform, and methinks I see it already approaching.... I am bent
+with the weight of years, and weak in body, and I have not the
+learning, the ability, and eloquence, that so great an undertaking
+requires. But God will raise up a hero, who by his age, strength,
+talents, learning, genius and eloquence, shall hold the foremost
+place. He will begin the reformation; he will oppose error, and God
+will give him boldness to resist the mighty ones of the earth."</p>
+<p>John Hilten censured the most flagrant abuses of the monastic
+life, and the exasperated monks threw him into prison and treated
+him shamefully. "The Franciscan, forgetting his malady and groaning
+heavily, replied: 'I bear your insults calmly for the love of
+Christ; for I have said nothing that can injure the monastic state:
+I have only censured its most crying abuses.' 'But,' continued he
+(according to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page247" name=
+"page247"></a>[pg 247]</span> what Melancthon records in his
+Apology for the Augsburg Confession of Faith), 'another man will
+rise in the year of our Lord 1516: he will destroy you, and you
+shall not be able to resist him.'"</p>
+<p>In 1516 Luther held a public discussion with Feld-kirchen, in
+which he upheld certain doctrines of truth that made a great stir
+among the Romanists. Says D'Aubigne: "The disputation took place in
+1516. This was Luther's first attack upon the dominion of the
+sophists and upon the Papacy, as he himself characterizes it." And
+again, "This disputation made a great noise, and it has been
+considered as the beginning of the reformation." Book I, Chap. 9.
+The next year, however, he entered publicly upon the actual work of
+reformation.</p>
+<p>Frederick of Saxony, surnamed the Wise, was the most powerful
+elector of the German empire at the period of the reformation. A
+dream he had and related just before the world was startled by the
+first great act of reformation is so striking that I feel justified
+in repeating it in this connection. It was as follows:</p>
+<p>"Having gone to bed last night, tired and dispirited, I soon
+fell asleep after saying my prayers, and slept calmly for about two
+hours and a half. I then awoke, and all kinds of thoughts occupied
+me until midnight.... I then fell asleep again, and dreamed the
+Almighty sent me a monk, who was a true son of Paul the apostle. He
+was accompanied by all the saints, in obedience to God's command,
+to bear him testimony, and to assure me that he did not come with
+any fraudulent design, but that all he should do was conformable to
+the will of God. They <span class="pagenum"><a id="page248" name=
+"page248"></a>[pg 248]</span> asked my gracious permission to let
+him write something on the doors of the palace-chapel at
+Wittemberg, which I conceded through my chancellor. Upon this, the
+monk retired thither and began to write; so large were the
+characters that I could read from Schweinitz what he was writing
+[about 18 miles]. The pen he used was so long that its extremity
+reached as far as Rome, where it pierced the ears of a lion which
+lay there, and shook the triple crown on the Pope's head. All the
+cardinals and princes ran up hastily and endeavored to support
+it.... I stretched out my arm: that moment I awoke with my arm
+extended, in great alarm and very angry with this monk, who could
+not guide his pen better. I recovered myself a little.... It was
+only a dream. I was still half asleep, and once more closed my
+eyes. The dream came again. The lion, still disturbed by the pen,
+began to roar with all his might, until the whole city of Rome, and
+all the States of the holy empire, ran up to know what was the
+matter. The Pope called upon us to oppose this monk, and addressed
+himself particularly to me, because the friar was living in my
+dominions. I again awoke, repeated the Lord's prayer, entreated God
+to preserve his Holiness, and fell asleep.... I then dreamt that
+all the princes of the empire, and we along with them, hastened to
+Rome, and endeavored one after another to break this pen; but the
+greater our exertions the stronger it became: it crackled as if it
+had been made of iron: we gave it up as hopeless. I then asked the
+monk (for I was now at Rome, now at Wittemberg) where he had got
+that pen, and how it came to be so strong. [In those days they used
+goosequills for pens.] 'This <span class="pagenum"><a id="page249"
+name="page249"></a>[pg 249]</span> pen,' replied he, 'belonged to a
+Bohemian goose [Huss] a hundred years old. I had it from one of my
+old schoolmasters. It is so strong because no one can take the pith
+out of it, and I am myself quite astonished at it.' On a sudden I
+heard a loud cry; from the monk's long pen had issued a host of
+other pens. I awoke a third time; it was day light." History of the
+Reformation, Book III, Chap. 4.</p>
+<p>Frederick related the foregoing to his brother John, the Duke of
+York, on the morning of Oct. 31, 1517, stating that he had dreamed
+it during the previous night. The same day at noon Martin Luther
+advanced boldly to the chapel at Wittemberg and posted upon the
+door ninety-five theses, or propositions, against the Papal
+doctrine of indulgences. This was his public entrance upon the
+great work of reformation. The importance of the Reformation of the
+Sixteenth Century is incalculable. It gave the deathblow to the
+universal spiritual supremacy of Rome. As we have already seen, the
+Papacy had for centuries held despotic sway over the minds and the
+consciences of men. One potent cause of the Reformation was the
+great Revival of Learning that marked the close of the medieval and
+the beginning of the modern period of history. This great mental
+awakening contrasted sharply with the blind ignorance and
+superstition of the Middle Ages, and caused many men to doubt the
+Scriptural authority of many of the doctrines and ceremonies of the
+Church of Rome; such as invocation of saints, auricular confession,
+use of images, worship of the Virgin Mary, etc.</p>
+<p>Scandals and abuses in the Church of Rome also hastened the
+Reformation. During the fifteenth century <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page250" name="page250"></a>[pg 250]</span> the
+morals of that church had sunk to the greatest depths of iniquity.
+The Popes themselves were, in some cases, monsters of impurity and
+iniquity, insomuch that historians are obliged to draw the vail
+over many of their dark deeds.</p>
+<p>But the real occasion of the revolt of the northern nations of
+Europe against the jurisdiction of Rome was the controversy
+regarding indulgences. "These in the Catholic church, are
+remissions, to penitents of punishment due for sin, upon the
+performances of some work of mercy or piety, or the payment of a
+sum of money." When Leo X. was elected to the Papal dignity (1513),
+he found the church in great need of money for the building of
+Saint Peter's and other undertakings, and he had recourse to a
+grant of indulgences to fill the coffers of the church. The power
+of dispensing these indulgences in Saxony in Germany was given to a
+Dominican friar named Tetzel. This fanatic enthusiast entertained
+the most exaggerated opinion of the efficacy of indulgences. In his
+harrangues he uttered such expressions as the following:</p>
+<p>"Indulgences are the most precious and the most noble of God's
+gifts." "There is no sin so great that an indulgence can not remit;
+... only let him pay well, and all will be forgiven him." "Come,
+and I will give you letters, all properly sealed, by which even the
+sins that you intend to commit may be pardoned." "I would not
+change my privileges for those of St. Peter in heaven; for I have
+saved more souls by my indulgences than the apostle by his
+sermons." "The Lord Omnipotent hath ceased to reign; he has
+resigned all power to the Pope." See D'Aubigne's <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page251" name="page251"></a>[pg 251]</span>
+History of the Reformation, Book III, Chap. 1.</p>
+<p>Martin Luther was an Augustine monk and a teacher of theology in
+the University of Wittemberg. Before Tetzel appeared in Germany,
+Luther possessed a wide reputation for learning and piety, and he
+had also entertained doubts respecting many of the doctrines of the
+church. During an official visit to Rome in 1510 he was almost
+overwhelmed with sorrow because of the moral corruption there; but
+while penitentially ascending on his knees the sacred stairs of the
+Lateran, he seemed to hear a voice thundering in his soul, "The
+just shall live by faith!" This marked an important epoch in his
+career.</p>
+<p>When Tetzel appeared in Saxony with his indulgences, Luther
+fearlessly opposed him. He drew up ninety-five theses against the
+infamous traffic and nailed them to the door of the church at
+Wittemberg, and invited all scholars to criticise them and point
+out if they were opposed to the doctrine of the Word of God or of
+the early church Fathers. Here the invention of printing proved to
+be a powerful agency in advancing the cause of reformation by
+scattering copies of these theses everywhere; and soon the
+continent of Europe was in a perfect turmoil of controversy. The
+Pope excommunicated Luther as a heretic. In reply Luther burned the
+Papal bull publicly at Wittemberg. Shortly afterward Luther
+produced his celebrated translation of the Bible in the German
+language. Even a brief history of the entire Reformation would be
+too large for the limits of the present volume, therefore with a
+few words respecting the nature of the work of the Reformation we
+will pass on to another prophetic vision.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page252" name="page252"></a>[pg
+252]</span>
+<p>The great secret of the early success of the reformers was their
+appeal from the decisions of councils and regulations of men to the
+Word of God. So long as the Word and Spirit of God were allowed
+their proper place as the Governors of God's people, the work was a
+spiritual blessing. But this happy state of affairs did not long
+continue. Within a few years the followers of the reformers were
+divided into hostile sects and began to oppose and persecute each
+other. Luther denounced Zwingle as a heretic, and "the Calvinists
+would have no dealings with the Lutherans." The first Protestant
+creed was the Augsburg Confession (1530). This date marks an
+important epoch. From this time the people began to lose sight of
+the Word and Spirit of God as their Governors and to turn to the
+disciplines of their sects, which they upheld by every means
+possible. Thus we find Calvin at Geneva consenting to the burning
+of Servetus, because of a difference of religious views; and in
+England the Anglican Protestants waged the most bitter, cruel, and
+relentless war not only against Catholics, but against all
+Protestants who refused to conform to the Established Church. The
+Protestants placed armies in the field and fought for their creeds,
+as during the Thirty Years' War in Germany and the long period of
+the Hugenot wars in France. The real work of the Reformation, the
+promulgation of so much of the truth of the Bible, was an
+inestimable blessing to the world; but the rise of Protestantism
+(organized sectism) in 1530 introduced another period of apostasy
+as distinct in many of its features as was that of Romanism before
+it. The historian <span class="pagenum"><a id="page253" name=
+"page253"></a>[pg 253]</span> D'Aubigne recognizes an important
+change at this period. He says:</p>
+<p>"The first two books of this volume contain the most important
+epochs of the Reformation&mdash;the Protest of Spires, and the
+Confession of Augsburg.... I determined on bringing the reformation
+of Germany and German Switzerland to the <i>decisive epochs of</i>
+1530 and 1531. The history of the Reformation, properly so-called,
+is then in my opinion almost complete in those countries. The work
+of faith has there attained its apogee: that of conferences, of
+interims, of diplomacy begins.... The movement of the Sixteenth
+Century has there made its effort. I said from the very first, It
+is the history of the Reformation and not of Protestantism that I
+am relating." Preface to Vol. V.</p>
+<a name="chap13-11" id="chap13-11"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>11. And I beheld another beast coming up out of the earth; and
+he had two horns like a lamb, and he spake as a dragon.</p>
+<p>12. And he exerciseth all the power of the first beast before
+him, and causeth the earth and them which dwell therein to worship
+the first beast, whose deadly wound was healed.</p>
+<p>13. And he doeth great wonders, so that he maketh fire come down
+from heaven on the earth in the sight of men,</p>
+<p>14. And deceiveth them that dwell on the earth by the means of
+those miracles which he had power to do in the sight of the beast;
+saying to them that dwell on the earth, that they should make an
+image to the beast, which had the wound by a sword, and did
+live.</p>
+<a name="chap13-15" id="chap13-15"></a>
+<p>15. And he had power to give life unto the image of the beast,
+that the image of the beast <span class="pagenum"><a id="page254"
+name="page254"></a>[pg 254]</span> should both speak, and cause
+that as many as would not worship the image of the beast should be
+killed.</p>
+<p>16. And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor,
+free and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their
+foreheads:</p>
+<p>17. And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the
+mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.</p>
+<p>18. Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the
+number of the beast: for it is the number of a man; and his number
+is Six hundred threescore and six.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The symbolic description of this beast directs us also to a
+political and a religious system rising at the expiration of the
+twelve hundred and sixty years' reign of the first beast, but that
+he was no such terrible beast politically as the one before him is
+proved by the fact that he had but two horns and they <i>like a
+lamb</i>. This beast rose "out of the earth"&mdash;the Apocalyptic
+earth, or the territory of the Roman empire. The first beast rose
+out of the sea, which, as before shown, signifies the heart of the
+empire in an agitated state; for the ten horns came up through the
+greatest political convulsions that the page of history records.
+When John beheld the second beast "coming up," however, the empire
+was in a state of comparative quiet, although fierce wars followed
+afterward. He stands as a symbol of <i>Protestantism</i> in Europe;
+although his power and influence afterwards extended beyond the
+"earth"&mdash;the Apocalyptic earth&mdash;into "the whole world."
+Chap. <a href="#chap16-14">16:14</a>. That this beast came up upon
+the same territory occupied by the Papacy is proved also by the
+statement that <span class="pagenum"><a id="page255" name=
+"page255"></a>[pg 255]</span> "he exerciseth all the power of the
+first beast before him." It was predicted in a subsequent chapter
+(<a href="#chap17-16">17:16</a>) that the ten horns, or kingdoms of
+Europe, after supporting the Papacy during the Dark Ages, would
+later turn against her. This has met a remarkable fulfilment under
+the reign of Protestantism.</p>
+<p>The first two nations to turn violently against Popery were
+England and Germany. They have ever since been the chief supporters
+and defenders of Protestantism, and they are doubtless the two
+kingdoms symbolized by the two horns of the beast. While at one
+time the Pope was a temporal sovereign and could, by his political
+and ecclesiastical power, humble with ease the mightiest nations of
+Europe before him, his authority has been wrested from him by
+degrees, so that to-day not a vestige of his temporal power
+remains, and his anathemas fall harmlessly. The nations have
+asserted their rights as kings. When King Victor Emmanuel entered
+Rome on the twentieth day of September, 1870, the Pope's temporal
+sun set forever, and he does not control even the city in which he
+lives&mdash;Rome. He is often referred to as "the prisoner of the
+Vatican." "He that leadeth into captivity shall go into captivity,"
+said the prophecy; "he that killeth with the sword must be killed
+with the sword." It was by force of arms that the Popes obtained
+and maintained their temporal power over the nations, and by the
+force of arms they have had their authority torn from them.
+Religion has been referred to as "the basis of government"; for the
+legislators of any country are to a great degree influenced in
+their deliberations by religious sentiments. In all Protestant
+countries that greatest of Protestant <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page256" name="page256"></a>[pg 256]</span> principles, religious
+liberty, is as truly recognized by statute as was that infernal
+principle of the Papacy, religious intolerance, when formerly
+enforced by law. Protestant principles have so far permeated the
+nations of Europe formerly controlled by the Papacy that religious
+toleration is generally granted. In Italy, the headquarters of
+Popedom, where the Catholics are greatly in the majority, religious
+liberty is granted by law. And even Spain, denominated by the
+Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica "the most Catholic country in the
+world," exhibits "a general indifferentism to religion," meaning
+that the fanaticism and intolerance of former ages that caused
+thousands, and perhaps millions, to be slain, is rapidly dying out.
+In the vision before us, however, the special actions ascribed to
+this beast&mdash;<i>speaking</i>, working miracles, deceiving,
+making an image and imparting life to it, etc., which all belong
+properly to the department of human life&mdash;show conclusively
+that it is the character of this beast as an <i>ecclesiastical
+power</i> that is the chief point under consideration. He was not
+to become such a terrible beast politically (for his horns were
+only <i>like a lamb</i>), but "he <i>spake</i> as a dragon." As
+soon as we enter the department to which <i>speaking</i> by analogy
+refers us, we find this beast to be a great religious power; and it
+is in this character alone that he is dilineated in the remainder
+of the chapter. That the description of a religious system is the
+main burden of this symbol, is shown also by the fact that it is in
+every case referred to in subsequent chapters as the "false
+prophet." Chap. <a href="#chap16-13">16:13</a>; <a href=
+"#chap19-20">19:20</a>; <a href="#chap20-10">20:10</a>. Therefore
+every reference I make to this second beast hereafter should be
+understood as signifying the religious <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page257" name="page257"></a>[pg 257]</span> system of
+Protestantism, unless otherwise stated.</p>
+<p>That Protestantism in its many forms can be properly represented
+by a single symbol&mdash;a beast or false prophet&mdash;may seem a
+little strange at first; but when we come to consider next the
+making of an image to the beast, it will be seen that the
+Protestant sects, from God's standpoint of viewing, are all alike
+in character, as were the multitudinous forms of heathen worship
+represented under the single symbol of the dragon. Hence only one
+beast, or the making of one image, was necessary to stand as
+representative of the entire number. It will be noticed by the
+reader that from verse 12 to the close of the chapter the term
+<i>beast</i> signifies the first beast, or the Papacy, and that the
+second beast, or Protestantism, is designated by the pronoun
+<i>he</i>.</p>
+<p><i>Image</i> is defined to be "an imitation, representation,
+similitude of any person or thing; a copy, a likeness, an effigy."
+The second beast, then, is to manufacture something in
+<i>imitation</i> of the first beast. If any doubt exists as to
+which phase of the first beast, political or ecclesiastical, is
+copied, it can be settled by considering what is said of the image
+made from the original. "The image of the beast
+should&mdash;<i>speak</i>." This directs us by analogy, as
+heretofore explained, to the department of religious affairs; hence
+the second beast forms an <i>ecclesiastical organization</i> in
+imitation of the hierarchy of Rome. At this juncture the Protestant
+will doubtless exclaim, "Oh, our churches are nothing like the
+church of Rome!" But consider a little in the light of truth. God's
+Word teaches that they bear the close relationship of <i>mother</i>
+and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page258" name="page258"></a>[pg
+258]</span> her <i>daughters</i> (Rev. <a href=
+"#chap17-5">17:5</a>), and by the help of the Lord we shall point
+out a similarity of character in this and subsequent chapters. The
+symbol of the church of Rome in <a href="#chap17">chapter 17</a> is
+that of a corrupt <i>prostitute</i>, while the symbol of
+Protestantism is that of her <i>harlot daughters</i>. The Roman
+church is a humanly organized institution governed by a set of
+fallible men, their claims of infallibility to the contrary
+notwithstanding. Protestant sects, likewise, are all human
+organizations (even though they may sometimes deny it), and are
+governed by a man or a conference of men. The Roman Catholic church
+makes and prescribes the theology that her members believe.
+Protestant churches, also, make their own disciplines and prescribe
+rules of faith and practise. The Word of God, inspired by his
+Spirit, could not be enforced in Romanism without destroying it;
+for its main spirit is Antichrist. So, too, the whole Word in
+Protestantism would soon annihilate her God-dishonoring sects; for
+they are all contrary to its plain teachings, which condemn
+divisions and enjoin perfect unity and oneness upon the redeemed of
+the Lord. What is said concerning the image of the beast applies to
+sectarianism as a whole and the human organization of all her
+so-called churches, regardless of the differences that exist
+between them as individual institutions; for they may differ as
+widely as the various systems of heathen religions symbolized by
+the dragon, yet they can be represented by the single symbol of an
+image to the first beast, because they are built upon the same
+general principles&mdash;are but human organizations, falsely
+called churches of Christ, and are all contrary to the
+Scriptures.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page259" name="page259"></a>[pg
+259]</span>
+<p>Imparting life to the image of the beast simply signifies the
+complete organization of the ecclesiastical institutions so that
+they are capable of self-government and their decrees possess
+authority. Every living body is animated by a spirit. The sectarian
+spirit that animates the Methodist body will lead people into that
+body, etc.; but the one Spirit of God will, if permitted, baptize
+us all into the one body of Christ, where we can all "drink into
+one Spirit." 1 Cor. 12:13. "And he spake as a dragon" signifies the
+great authority by which his laws are enacted and enforced upon the
+people.</p>
+<p>"And he doeth great wonders, so that he maketh fire come down
+from heaven on the earth in the sight of men, and deceiveth them
+that dwell on the earth by the means of those miracles which he had
+power to do in the sight of the beast; saying to them that dwell on
+the earth, that they should make an image to the beast." Fire from
+heaven upon Elijah's sacrifice was the attestation of God to his
+divine mission. Bringing down fire from heaven, then, symbolically
+describes the claims of this beast to being a true prophet of the
+Lord.</p>
+<p>At this point we must make a distinction which, being true in
+the facts of history, must necessarily be intended in the symbolic
+representation. According to the symbols of the preceding chapter
+the woman, or true church, "fled into the wilderness, where she
+hath a place prepared of God, that they should feed her there a
+thousand two hundred and threescore days." The time-prophecy is the
+same and covers the same period as the reign of the Papal beast;
+therefore just as an important change in the Papacy <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page260" name="page260"></a>[pg 260]</span>
+occured at the expiration of the prophetic period, so also we must
+expect a radical change with respect to the true church: it must no
+longer be completely obscured in the wilderness.</p>
+<p>As the Reformation, and Protestantism as a religion, was the
+means of ending Rome's universal spiritual supremacy, so also the
+same movement must be regarded as possessing sufficient light and
+truth to again bring into prominence the work of the Spirit and the
+true people of God. "Fire from heaven" may therefore be regarded as
+describing the divine work of reformation, the unfolding of truth
+accompanied by the saving power of God. Such spiritual work has
+accompanied the origin of various religious movements during the
+Protestant era.</p>
+<p>The general description of the two-horned beast, however, brings
+into prominence an evil characteristic&mdash;the disposition to
+lead people into deception by making an image to the beast and then
+worshiping it. The evil does not inhere in the work of bringing
+down "fire from heaven," but in image-making and image-worship, for
+which the Spiritual work simply furnished an occasion. The
+Spiritual work of reformation is therefore to be distinguished from
+the later work of creed- and sect-making. And since the beast takes
+advantage of Spirit manifestations, in order to deceive men, he
+becomes a sort of apostate and is denominated "the <i>false
+prophet</i>." See Chap. <a href="#chap16-14">16:14</a>; <a href=
+"#chap19-20">19:20</a>.</p>
+<p>Ecclesiastically considered, the two-horned beast stands as the
+symbol of the religious system of Protestantism as a whole&mdash;a
+peculiar combination of truth and error, of good and bad, of "fire
+from heaven" <span class="pagenum"><a id="page261" name=
+"page261"></a>[pg 261]</span> and false, miracle-working power
+(chap. <a href="#chap16-14">16:14</a>); while the "image to the
+beast" signifies the sectarian institution&mdash;the man-made,
+man-controlled, unscriptural sect machinery manufactured in
+imitation of the Papal original. To exalt such earth-born churches
+and lead people to adore and worship them is but a species of
+idolatry and the rankest deception. It is a sad fact that
+multitudes of people in Protestantism are more devoted to their
+particular church than they are to the Lord Jesus Christ. They can
+witness the open rejection of God's precious Word and the vilest
+profanation of his holy name, without uttering a word of protest;
+but let anyone say a word against <i>their church</i>, and
+instantly they are aroused to the highest pitch of
+excitement&mdash;beast-worshipers!</p>
+<p>The Protestant era has witnessed many wonderful reformations in
+which the true fire of God fell upon waiting souls, but this
+initial work of the Spirit has in each case been employed as an
+excuse for taking the next step&mdash;making an image. Thousands of
+honest souls, lacking better light, have been induced to submit to
+such human organization. But the truly saved have always loved and
+adored their Lord more than the human church to which they were
+attached, therefore they should not be regarded as
+beast-worshipers. They are the ones whom the Lord denominates his
+people when the voice is heard calling them out of Babylon. Chap.
+<a href="#chap18-4">18:4</a>.</p>
+<p>The "mark of the beast" next claims our attention. The beast
+referred to is the Papacy. How did the Papacy mark its subjects?
+Undoubtedly, by the false spirit which animated that organization,
+branding them all with its delusive doctrines and errors. In a
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page262" name="page262"></a>[pg
+262]</span> previous chapter the servants of God were represented
+as receiving the seal of God in their foreheads. This was shown to
+signify the pure Word and doctrines of the Bible being planted
+within them by the Holy Spirit. In making the sect image in
+imitation of the Papal original, then, the principle of marking
+subjects has also been copied. The members of every sect
+organization are indelibly marked. You can not become one of them
+without solemnly agreeing to believe the doctrines taught in their
+discipline and accepting the government of their man-made
+institutions. Subscribing to the rules of faith and practise that
+originated with the sect shows how its members worship the image.
+They are also said to worship the first beast, the original of the
+image. How is this fulfilled? In the same manner that the
+worshipers of the first beast worshiped the dragon that preceded
+it; namely, by accepting and believing false principles of faith
+that originated in the system immediately preceding. Protestant
+sects have transferred many of the false doctrines of Romanism to
+their own creeds, hence they worship the first beast just as truly
+as the Papists worshiped the dragon by accepting heathenish
+principles. The greatest principle of false doctrine that
+originated with Catholicism, and one that has been transferred to
+<i>every Protestant sect</i>, is, that a human organization is
+necessary to complete the church of Christ on earth. The church of
+Rome has an earthly head and a human government; and Protestants,
+also, firmly believe the unscriptural doctrine that they must bow
+to an organization of men and thus be under a visible headship:
+they receive the mark of the beast. Many sects have also copied
+other <span class="pagenum"><a id="page263" name="page263"></a>[pg
+263]</span> Popish doctrines, such as infant baptism, the
+destruction of all outside of the pales of the church (?),
+infantile damnation, sprinkling, and other things too numerous to
+mention. Thus, they worship the first beast as well as his
+image.</p>
+<p>They also receive the "name of the beast." Here again "beast"
+refers to the Papacy. The Papal beast was represented as being full
+of the names of blasphemy, which blasphemy was shown to signify the
+usurpation of prerogatives and rights belonging to God alone. The
+greatest ecclesiastical usurpation reached by the Romish hierarchy
+was that of claiming to be the head of the church and the right to
+prescribe and enforce their doctrines, naming their organization
+the <i>Holy Catholic Church</i>. In making their sect organizations
+in imitation, Protestants, as above stated, have transferred the
+same principle and make the same blasphemous claim of a right to
+make disciplines to govern God's people, and then name their sect
+machinery a <i>church</i> of God. The name may be Methodist,
+Baptist, Mennonite, Episcopalian, or what not, it is only a
+<i>beast name</i>, yet a name that you must accept if you desire to
+become one of them.</p>
+<p>They not only receive the name of the beast, but also receive
+the "number of his name." It will be necessary first to explain
+what is meant by the number of a name. "The modern system of
+notation by the nine digits and the cipher, was not introduced
+until the tenth century, but on account of its superior excellence,
+has since superseded every other. Previous to this great discovery,
+the letters of the alphabet were used to denote numbers, each
+letter having the power of a <i>number</i> as well as a
+<i>sound</i>. The same system is <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page264" name="page264"></a>[pg 264]</span> still retained among
+us for certain purposes. The Roman letters I. V. X. L. C. D. M.,
+have each the power of expressing a number. This, however, was the
+common and the best mode of notation that the ancients possessed."
+The number of a name, therefore, was merely the number denoted by
+the several letters of that name.</p>
+<p>The number of the name of the beast&mdash;the first
+beast&mdash;is said to be the number of a <i>man</i>. When we enter
+the Romish hierarchy and search for a man the number of whose name
+will be six hundred and sixty-six, where could we go more
+appropriately than to the Pope himself, its authorized head? The
+Scriptures point him out particularly as the "<i>man</i> of sin,"
+"the son of perdition." 2 Thes. 2:3, 4. Has the Pope of Rome a name
+the letters of which, used as numerals, make six hundred and
+sixty-six? Yes. He wears in jeweled letters upon his miter the
+following blasphemous inscription: <i>Vicarius Filii
+Dei</i>&mdash;Vicar of the Son of God. Taking out of this name all
+the letters that the Latins used as numerals, we have just six
+hundred and sixty-six. U and V were both formerly used to denote
+five.</p>
+<pre>
+V ..... 5 F ..... 0
+I ..... 1 I ..... 1
+C ... 100 L .... 50
+A ..... 0 I ..... 1
+R ..... 0 I ..... 1
+I ..... 1 D ... 500
+U ..... 5 E ..... 0
+S ..... 0 I ..... 1
+ &mdash;-
+ 666
+</pre>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page265" name="page265"></a>[pg
+265]</span>
+<p>In some manner the worshipers of Protestant images also receive
+the number of this name&mdash;six hundred and sixty-six. The name
+is that of "Vicar of the Son of God." In all Protestantism (see
+remarks on chapter <a href="#chap11-7">11:7, 8</a>) the true Vicars
+of Christ on earth&mdash;the Word and Spirit of God&mdash;have been
+set aside, and conferences of men have taken their places in all
+the official acts relative to spiritual affairs. Hence the number
+of the name applies to them as well. What that number specially
+symbolizes I do not know, unless it is, as has been explained by
+others&mdash;<i>division</i>. While the policy of Romanism has been
+that of unity, still the false claims made by one individual can be
+as well made by another, and by many, which has been the case, as
+just explained; therefore it would not be improper at all to make
+the Pope's number a symbol of the whole, since his system has been
+so largely copied by the rest. The whole structure of sectarianism
+is built on the principle of division, and it so happens that there
+is always enough left to divide again. So this special number is
+perhaps the symbol of endless division, signifying the great number
+of human organizations claiming to be churches of Christ. The
+church of God, however, is built on the principal of unity;
+division is destruction to its true nature and life, for it is
+Christ's body.</p>
+<p>It is further said that "no man might buy or sell, save he that
+had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name."
+To "buy or sell" is to engage in the ordinary pursuits of life and
+have intercourse with human society. Applying this as a symbol to
+the analagous department of the church, we have the fact set forth
+that those without the special mark <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page266" name="page266"></a>[pg 266]</span> have no more
+recognized standing in the so-called churches than men that are not
+allowed to buy or sell have in a community. But <i>selling</i>, as
+a symbol, would specially indicate the dealing out of truth, or the
+preaching of the gospel. A Holy Ghost minister in the clear light
+of heaven's truth, independent of all the creeds of Babylon, will
+not be allowed the privilege of laboring freely among sectarians,
+after the truth for which he stands becomes well known. And if he
+holds meetings in the community, the members of the sects are often
+warned by their leaders against "buying"&mdash;receiving&mdash;it
+from the Holy Ghost minister, because of his not having the mark or
+name of the beast. Their ministers are specially marked, for they
+come out of their colleges and theological seminaries with the
+stamp of their respective doctrines upon them and a license from
+the sect to enter its ministry; and those not thus marked or
+designated have no place among them. This may also explain the
+manner in which the beast causes those who will not worship the
+image to be killed&mdash;an analagous killing; namely, an
+ecclesiastical cutting-off, or excommunication, as explained in
+previous chapters.<a id="footnotetag9" name=
+"footnotetag9"></a><a href="#footnote9"><sup>9</sup></a></p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote9" name=
+"footnote9"></a><b>Footnote 9:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag9">(return)</a>
+<p>The early history of Protestantism shows that at that time the
+principle of religious intolerance brought over from Romanism
+manifested itself in the actual putting to death of numerous
+dissenters. For example see pp. <a href="#page252">252</a>,
+<a href="#page291">291-294</a> of the present work. It is possible
+that the persecuting principle ascribed to the two-horned beast may
+include both the literal and the ecclesiastical cutting-off,
+reference being made directly to the intolerant spirit.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The facts just stated are well illustrated by the following
+circumstances. A few years ago a brother in the ministry went into
+a certain town to find a place to conduct a series of holiness
+meetings. He was directed by a Presbyterian lady to their pastor,
+who, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page267" name="page267"></a>[pg
+267]</span> she said, was a believer in the doctrine of holiness.
+When he called on the minister and made known his errand, the first
+question asked him was this, "Are you a member of the Presbyterian
+church?" The brother answered in the negative. He did not have the
+<i>name of the beast</i>. The next question that greeted him was
+this, "Do you believe the Westminster Confession of Faith to be
+orthodox?" He answered, "No, sir." He did not have the <i>mark of
+the beast</i>. The last question asked was, "Do you belong to any
+of the various orthodox Protestant denominations?" The brother
+said, "No." He did not have the <i>number of his name</i>. The
+answer was, "You can not have our house."</p>
+<p>While on a missionary trip in the Near East, the writer, in
+company with another brother, attended a Seventh-Day Adventist
+service in Bucharest, Roumania. After the sermon another brother
+requested that we be given the opportunity to speak a little, but
+the request was absolutely refused. It was explained that we would
+say nothing against them or their work but only speak about
+salvation; but we were not permitted even to testify in a few
+words. The difficulty was that we did not have either the "mark of
+the beast" or its "name."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page268" name="page268"></a>[pg
+268]</span> <a name="chap14" id="chap14"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+<a name="chap14-1" id="chap14-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And I looked, and, lo, a Lamb stood on the mount Sion, and with
+him an hundred forty and four thousand, having his Father's name
+written in their foreheads.</p>
+<p>2. And I heard a voice from heaven, as the voice of many waters,
+and as the voice of a great thunder: and I heard the voice of
+harpers harping with their harps:</p>
+<p>3. And they sung as it were a new song before the throne, and
+before the four beasts, and the elders: and no man could learn that
+song but the hundred and forty and four thousand, which were
+redeemed from the earth.</p>
+<p>4. These are they which were not defiled with women; for they
+are virgins. These are they which follow the Lamb whithersoever he
+goeth. These were redeemed from among men, being the firstfruits
+unto God and to the Lamb.</p>
+<p>5. And in their mouth was found no guile: for they are without
+fault before the throne of God.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>There is no difficulty in identifying this company on Mount Sion
+as the true people of God in marked contrast with the worshipers of
+all corrupt and false religion. As to the chronology of the event,
+it is evident that we have here a continuation of the same series
+of prophecy beginning with the apostolic period in <a href=
+"#chap12">chapter XII</a>, describing alternately the true church
+and the false church.</p>
+<p>At the beginning of this series the true church, symbolized by
+the star-crowned woman, fled into the wilderness and was there lost
+to view; while the leopard beast and the two-horned beast of
+<a href="#chap13">chapter XIII</a>, symbolizing the two leading
+forms of organized Christianity, <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page269" name="page269"></a>[pg 269]</span> were brought into
+prominent view. It is therefore fitting that the true church should
+again appear and be given her proper position and work in the world
+before the end of all earthly things.</p>
+<p>That the company here brought to view represents the true church
+is shown by its agreement with the church of God before the
+apostasy began. In the seventh chapter we have seen that before the
+political calamities befell the Western Roman Empire the work of
+sealing God's servants was accomplished, twelve thousand from each
+of the twelve tribes of Israel being sealed, thus representing
+symbolically the fact that God's church, comprising the true
+Israel, was perfect and complete, no part being omitted. In the
+chapter under consideration we have this divine sealing process
+again after the apostasy, and once more the definite number 144,000
+occurs, showing that the church before the end is to be perfect and
+complete.</p>
+<p>The contrast of this company with the ecclesiastical powers in
+the preceding chapter proclaims in an unmistakeable manner the fact
+that we have here described a true reformation and work of God
+before the end of time. In the morning-time of the dispensation the
+redeemed of earth were represented as singing praises to Christ; so
+also the company here brought to view unite in singing a song which
+only the redeemed can know. This company is on Mount Sion, not in
+the darkness of the wilderness, they are with the Lamb, not
+wandering after the beast; they are not even following the beast
+that was "like a lamb," but they are with the true Lamb, the Savior
+of the world; they have the "Father's name written <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page270" name="page270"></a>[pg 270]</span> in
+their foreheads," not the mark or the name of the beast. It is said
+of them that "these are they which were not defiled with women, for
+they are virgins." Fornication and adultery, as will be explained
+later, is a symbol of spiritual idolatry; and the chastity of this
+redeemed company shows that they were free from the abominations of
+the apostasy. They "follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth." Their
+names are in the book of life, and they do not worship the beast.
+Chap. <a href="#chap13-8">13:8</a>.</p>
+<p>Here, then, we have a symbol of the church of God in the latter
+days standing distinct from the great apostasy.</p>
+<a name="chap14-6" id="chap14-6"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>6. And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having
+the everlasting gospel to preach unto them that dwell on the earth,
+and to every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people,</p>
+<p>7. Saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him;
+for the hour of his judgment is come: and worship him that made
+heaven, and earth, and the sea, and the fountains of waters.</p>
+<p>8. And there followed another angel, saying, Babylon is fallen,
+is fallen, that great city, because she made all nations drink of
+the wine of the wrath of her fornication.</p>
+<p>9. And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice,
+If any man worship the beast and his image, and receive his mark in
+his forehead, or in his hand,</p>
+<p>10. The same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which
+is poured out without mixture into the cup of his indignation; and
+he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of
+the holy angels, and in the presence of the Lamb:</p>
+<p>11. And the smoke of their torment ascendeth <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page271" name="page271"></a>[pg 271]</span> up for
+ever and ever: and they have no rest day nor night, who worship the
+beast and his image, and whosoever receiveth the mark of his
+name.</p>
+<a name="chap14-12" id="chap14-12"></a>
+<p>12. Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep
+the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.</p>
+<p>13. And I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, Write,
+Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth: Yea,
+saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labors; and their
+works do follow them.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Another phase of the last reformation is here brought to
+view&mdash;its communicative genius. It not only stands clear from
+the apostasy, but it sounds the warnings of God and proclaims his
+message. The first messenger had a very important message to
+deliver, even "the everlasting gospel." His message was not limited
+to the inhabitants of "the earth"&mdash;the Apocalyptic
+earth&mdash;only, but included "every nation, and kindred, and
+tongue, and people," showing that it was of universal importance.
+It was not a new gospel, but the everlasting gospel, the same
+gospel preached before the long period of apostasy. There is one
+phase different, however, and that is that the <i>nearness</i> of
+the second coming of Christ is a leading feature; the messenger
+with loud voice warns the people to prepare for the awful judgment
+just at hand by turning to "worship him that made heaven, and
+earth, and the sea, and the fountains of waters." The apostle Paul
+cautioned the Thessalonian brethren not to entertain the idea that
+the advent of Christ was then near at hand, for it could not come
+until after the great period of apostasy that he predicted; but
+here is a messenger now claiming that the "<i>hour of his judgment
+is come</i>"&mdash;an <span class="pagenum"><a id="page272" name=
+"page272"></a>[pg 272]</span> event just at hand. He carries his
+special message to all people; for Jesus declared, "This gospel of
+the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto
+all nations; and <i>then shall the end come</i>." Matt. 24:14. This
+represents the restoration of gospel truth in the reformation that
+was begun about the year A.D. 1880 and that is now being carried to
+all nations by a holy ministry.</p>
+<p>The nature of this restoration work is clearly shown. Its
+leading feature is its missionary character, the proclamation of
+the pure gospel to "every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and
+people." Since the days of the apostles the whole gospel has not
+been boldly declared and carried forward with burning missionary
+zeal. Romanism and Protestantism have conducted their missionary
+work and, according to chap. <a href="#chap16-14">16:14</a>, their
+sphere of influence will extend throughout "the whole world"; but
+here is clearly set forth the fact that God has authorized another
+universal message and world-wide work wholly distinguished from all
+others. The contrast between the worshipers of the beast and his
+image and those composing the redeemed company on Mount Sion is so
+clear, also the nature of the work done by each, that we can not
+possibly identify them as being one.</p>
+<p>This work of conducting a world-wide missionary enterprise may
+appear to be a gigantic task, but the seeming impossibility
+vanishes when we consider the fact (to be more fully developed
+hereafter) that God calls into this service all his people who are
+yet under the sectarian yoke. With this great host already
+dispersed over the world, the work of making known this last
+message can and will be accomplished.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page273" name="page273"></a>[pg
+273]</span>
+<p>The positive statement that the <i>hour</i> of his judgment is
+come shows that the end is exceedingly near; hence the second and
+third angels must follow the first in the closest proximity
+possible in order to introduce their messages before the wrath of
+God is poured out upon apostate Christendom. The time is so short
+that these three messengers can not possibly refer to three
+distinct reformations in the world; hence they must signify three
+important phases in the one last reformation that carries the
+gospel to all nations in the short period of an "hour," which time
+also includes the final judgment.</p>
+<p>A careful study of these three messages will show that they are
+inseparably connected. The second cry was against Babylon, that she
+had fallen. Rev. <a href="#chap18-1">18:1, 2</a> proves this fall
+of Babylon to be a moral one&mdash;a giving away to ungodliness,
+iniquity and all manner of deception. According to chapter 16:19
+the great city of Babylon is composed of three parts, being a
+confederation of the dragon<a id="footnotetag10" name=
+"footnotetag10"></a><a href="#footnote10"><sup>10</sup></a>
+(heathenism), the beast (Catholicism), and the false prophet
+(Protestantism). Chap. <a href="#chap16-13">16:13, 14</a>. It is
+evidently to this latter division of Babylon that this second
+message applies; for <span class="pagenum"><a id="page274" name=
+"page274"></a>[pg 274]</span> Paganism was always a false religion,
+and Catholicism was always a corrupt one, during whose reign the
+church of God, as already shown, was separate. Protestantism, then,
+was the only part of the great city that could fall morally or
+spiritually. During the space of three hundred and fifty years,
+from the formation of the first Protestant creed, she held reign
+and authority over the people of God, who were scattered among her
+hundreds of opposing sects.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote10" name=
+"footnote10"></a><b>Footnote 10:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag10">(return)</a>
+<p>That the dragon should be a part of great Babylon seems at first
+improbable; but in this statement reference is made, not to the
+dragon in his original, or Pagan, state, but to the form in which
+he is manifesting himself in these last days to deceive the
+nations, working in conjunction with apostate Christendom. This
+phase of the dragon power which brings him into harmony with, and,
+in reality, a part of, modern Babylon, will be more clearly
+understood when we come to consider the three unclean spirits that
+come out of the mouth of the dragon, the beast, and the false
+prophet (chap. <a href="#chap16-13">16:13, 14</a>), and the release
+of the dragon in chapter <a href="#chap20-7">20:7-9</a>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In this condition the faithful children of God, although bearing
+the mark and name of the beast, longed for restoration of the
+divine, primitive standard; but in the cloudy atmosphere of that
+period they could not clearly discern the whole truth. Later, when
+the full tidings of the everlasting gospel came, there came also a
+revelation that Babylon is fallen and that God is calling his
+people out of confusion just before the end of time.</p>
+<p>I call to witness every child of God who has been with the
+present reformation from its beginning, if there were not three
+special phases of the development of the truth, as follows: 1. A
+wonderful revival of spirituality among a few of God's chosen ones,
+caused by the "everlasting gospel" being revealed to them as never
+before. 2. The knowledge of the truth and deep experience thus
+obtained prepared the way for the next step, which was the
+discovery that the "churches" were a part of the great Babylon of
+Revelation and were in a fallen condition, "a hold of every foul
+spirit, and a cage of every unclean and hateful bird." Chap.
+<a href="#chap18-2">18:2, 3</a>. Hence the cry went up, "Babylon is
+fallen, is fallen." 3. Then followed immediately the message to
+God's people to "flee out <span class="pagenum"><a id="page275"
+name="page275"></a>[pg 275]</span> of the midst of Babylon and
+deliver every man his soul," warning them that no one could any
+longer bear the mark of the beast or worship his image without
+forfeiting eternal salvation and that the fearful judgments of
+heaven would soon descend upon every one who refused to obey the
+message and to walk in the light. The last two phases, which apply
+to Babylon, are the same and in the same order as the description
+given in chapter <a href="#chap18-1">18:1-4</a>. First, an angel
+from heaven cries mightily with a strong voice, "Babylon the great
+is fallen, is fallen"; and then "<i>another voice</i>" from heaven
+says, "COME OUT OF HER, MY PEOPLE." The three successive phases of
+the message are now all combined in one, and God is gathering his
+holy remnant "out of all places where they have been scattered in
+the cloudy and dark day" (Ezek. 34:12) into the one body of Jesus
+Christ. Halleluiah! John, also, saw this glorious result of the
+three messages&mdash;"And I saw as it were a sea of glass mingled
+with fire: and them that had gotten the victory over the beast, and
+over his image, and over his mark, and over the number of his name,
+stand on the sea of glass, having the harps of God. And they sung
+the song of Moses the servant of God [a song of deliverance], and
+the song of the Lamb [the song of redemption], saying, Great and
+marvelous are thy works, Lord God Almighty; just and true are thy
+ways, thou king of saints." Chap. <a href="#chap15-2">15:2, 3</a>.
+Let all the people of God rejoice!</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Hail the day so long expected,</p>
+<p class="i2">Hail the year of full release;</p>
+<p>Zion's walls are now erected,</p>
+<p class="i2">And the watchmen publish peace.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page276" name="page276"></a>[pg
+276]</span></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Now on Shiloh's wide dominion,</p>
+<p class="i2">Hear the trumpets loudly roar:</p>
+<p>Babylon's fallen, is fallen, is fallen,</p>
+<p class="i2">Babylon's fallen to rise no more."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Those of the Lord's people who through lack of sufficient light
+were yoked up with unbelievers in Protestantism, labored faithfully
+to upbuild the very sectarian institutions that God was against and
+that were destined to be destroyed, though they themselves were
+saved as by fire; but from the time this reformation began the
+redeemed die in the triumphs of a living faith, and their labors in
+upbuilding the true cause and kingdom of God are still blessed and
+fruitful, being perpetuated in the works that follow them.</p>
+<p>"Here is the patience of the saints; here are they that keep the
+commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus." As before mentioned,
+God's people during the reign of Romanism expected her universal
+supremacy to come to an end, and their patience was greatly
+exercised in waiting for the appointed time to arrive. It came with
+a great spiritual reformation. Then followed another period of
+apostasy, during which time God's people again looked forward to
+something better in the future. Many remarkable predictions of this
+present holiness reformation were uttered by some of the most
+spiritual saints during the Protestant era, and I can not refrain
+from mentioning a few of them in this connection.</p>
+<p>D'Aubigne: "The nineteenth century is called to resume the work
+which the sixteenth century was unable to accomplish." History of
+the Reformation, Book XV, Chap. 1.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page277" name="page277"></a>[pg
+277]</span>
+<p>Fletcher: "Only He will come with more mercy, and will increase
+the light that shall be at eventide, according to his promise in
+Zech. 14:7. I should rather think that the visions are not yet
+plainly disclosed; and that the day and hour in which the Lord will
+begin to make bare his arm openly are still concealed from us. Oh,
+when will the communion of saints be complete? Lord, hasten the
+time; and let me have a place among them that love thee, and love
+one another in sincerity." This is an extract from a letter written
+by John Fletcher to Mr. Wesley, dated London, May 26, 1757, as
+given in Joseph Benson's life of Fletcher, pp. 39, 40.</p>
+<p>D'Aubigne again: "In every age it has been seen how great is the
+strength of an idea to penetrate the masses, to stir nations, and
+to hurry them, if required, by thousands to the battle-field and to
+death. But if so great be the strength of a human idea, what power
+must not a heaven-descended idea possess, when God opens to it the
+gates of the heart! The world has not often seen so much power at
+work; it was seen, however, in the early days of Christianity, and
+in the time of the Reformation; and <i>it will be seen in
+future</i> ages." Book VI, Chap. 12.</p>
+<p>"It has been said that the three last centuries, the sixteenth,
+the seventeenth, and the eighteenth, may be conceived as an immense
+battle of three days' duration. We willingly adopt this beautiful
+comparison.... The first day was the battle of God, the second the
+battle of the priest, the third the battle of reason. What will be
+the fourth? In our opinion, the confused strife, the deadly contest
+of all these powers <span class="pagenum"><a id="page278" name=
+"page278"></a>[pg 278]</span> together, to <i>end in the victory of
+Him to whom triumph belongs</i>." Book XI, Chap. 9.</p>
+<p>Lorenzo Dow, comment on Rev. 14:6-11; 18:1-5: "The angel, or
+extraordinary messenger, with his assistants, proclaiming the fall
+of Babylon will be known in his time. Also the one warning the
+people of God to come out of Babylon literally, spiritually, and
+practically, will be known also, and such other threatening for the
+omission of compliance is not to be found in all the Bible." Dow's
+Works, p. 533.</p>
+<p>The following extracts are from an old book written about 1812
+by Theophilus R. Gates and entitled "Truth Advocated." Through the
+kindness of a sister living in Allegan County, Michigan, the writer
+was enabled to secure the following from the only copy of this book
+known to be in existence&mdash;she having borrowed it of her
+neighbor, a relative of its author.</p>
+<p>On Rev. 14:11: "I would here gladly drop the subject, lest I
+give offense; but duty compels me to remark, what can not be
+denied, that an inordinate attachment to certain systems and forms
+of religion, has occasioned all the strifes, animosities, and
+persecutions, that have so long agitated the Christian world; and
+if God be just, every one must drink of the cup of his indignation,
+according to his offense. The beast and his image, as it exists in
+Protestant countries, seems in this place particularly meant; and
+our own land is full of the number of his name. That such a
+testimony will one day go forth we must believe, or else St. John
+saw that which will never be: and the testimony will as certainly
+be received; for <span class="pagenum"><a id="page279" name=
+"page279"></a>[pg 279]</span> a company in the next chapter are to
+be seen that had gotten the victory over the beast, his image, his
+mark, and the number of his name. It is also equally true that as
+yet it has never gone forth; and that at the time, great
+afflictions or suffering of some kind will be undergone to exercise
+the patience of the saints.... It is at this very time, no doubt,
+that the three unclean spirits, like frogs, come out of the mouth
+of the dragon, the beast, and the false prophet; spirits of devils
+working miracles, which go forth unto the kings of the earth, and
+of the whole world, to gather them to the great battle of the great
+day of God Almighty. The greatest possible efforts, indeed will now
+be made by all the sectarians to keep up their existence ... nor is
+it any wonder that hireling ministers and system worshipers,
+Demetrius like, should be stirred up and raise no small stir about
+the way; for it is evident, not only their craft is in danger of
+being set at naught by this testimony, but also the great Diana of
+systems and forms of religion to be despised, and their
+magnificence destroyed, whom now almost the whole Christian world
+worshipeth." Pp. 281-283.</p>
+<p>"And now commences an era of light and suffering, when the
+corrupt churches (with the kings of the earth and great men united
+with them) being about to be wholly brought down, make one general
+muster against Christ and his true worshipers. These things are
+clear to me as a ray of light; and whoever lives at this time will
+see as great opposition and spite to the true way of righteousness
+then set forth from sectarians and professors generally, as there
+was from the Jews towards Christ and his testimony: and
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page280" name="page280"></a>[pg
+280]</span> also, like the Jews, at the very time they oppose the
+true way of the Lord with all their might, they will no doubt make
+the greatest possible show of religion, will think they are the
+true church, yea will have a zeal for God, carrying on religion
+with great success, forming societies, sending missionaries among
+the heathen, etc., etc. That such an event will take place is very
+clear." Pp. 286-288.</p>
+<p>"This happy period I never expect to see: but known unto the
+Lord only are all things. I know that such a time will be; for we
+are assured by the angel, these are the true sayings of God: and I
+also believe that it will take place <i>within two centuries</i>
+from this time. But oh! how corrupt doth the world now appear to
+me.... Help me, O Lord, I pray thee, to do thy will.</p>
+<p>"Whenever any body of people come into notice, establish their
+rules and institutions, and become a respectable sect, they are the
+people of God then only in name; they cease to have the nature any
+longer; and whoever unites himself to the same, constitutes himself
+one of the beast's party, and so far as his influence extends, he
+helps to establish the kingdom of Antichrist in the earth. This is
+clear from the prophecies of the Revelation, and it will answer no
+purpose to take offense when the truth is spoken. These things
+will, moreover, sooner or later be declared with great plainness by
+some one; and then will the man of sin put forth all his strength;
+then will persecution come, and the beast muster his armies to
+defend himself and to destroy the assailants, but in vain; for
+however few their number may be at first, and however furious the
+battle may rage against <span class="pagenum"><a id="page281" name=
+"page281"></a>[pg 281]</span> them, they are destined to conquer.
+And herein the words of Christ will fitly apply, 'Fear not, little
+flock; for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the
+kingdom.'" P. 313.</p>
+<p>Speaking of sectarianism, he says further: "The same round of
+things will continue until the evil is remedied.... When this shall
+take place, time only can determine with certainty. It will
+probably commence slowly, and not come with any great outward
+observation. Few will at first see or embrace the way, being
+strange to them, and appearing on account of their prejudices, and
+the way they have been taught by the false prophet, to be wrong and
+improper: moreover, being opposed to all others, they will have all
+others to oppose them. But though they are despised and hated, and
+few in number, the Lord is with them." Pp. 322, 323.</p>
+<p>On Rev. 16:13, 14: "I have already delivered my views with
+respect to these unclean spirits ... and it is not necessary to say
+much here upon the subject; only I would just observe, that this
+will be a time of greater trial to Christians in general, and in a
+time in which more will be deprived of every particle of true
+religion through the influence of false ministers belonging to the
+different societies in Christendom, than any that has ever yet been
+in the world. But while they are making these great exertions, they
+are only preparing themselves and their deluded votaries for a more
+awful and complete destruction. For God Almighty is against them,
+and they against Him; though they will know it not, but think
+perhaps all the while they are his peculiar favorites, and that
+they are employed in maintaining his cause, like the Jews
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page282" name="page282"></a>[pg
+282]</span> before them, when it is only their own cause and men's
+traditions." P. 338.</p>
+<p>"I am but as the voice of one crying in the wilderness of error
+and of sin, of wickedness and delusion, testifying according to the
+best light given me; and any light that I can possibly communicate
+will in a little time become as the feeble shining of the sun, by
+reason of the greatness of the light that shall be hereafter." P.
+354.</p>
+<p>"A true and living testimony will go forth before this last
+period of the awful judgments of God comes to a close, and in
+consequence of rejecting it, like the Jews of old, the wrath of God
+will come upon them to the uttermost. The testimony against the
+worshipers of the beast, by the third angel, Rev. 14:9, is the
+testimony that effectually overthrows the kingdom of darkness and
+establishes the truth as it is in Jesus, pure and undefiled.... The
+authors of this testimony will ... unlike to all who go before
+them, attack the evil at its root, and expose the deceit, hypocrisy
+and wickedness of the different sects in a way that has never
+before been done; for which they will suffer the greatest
+persecution. You may look upon these things as the reveries of my
+own fancy; but some day or other, people will witness to the truth
+of what I now write." Pp. 421, 422.</p>
+<p>"All the reformations which go before this last great reform
+will only be partial and temporary. They will only lop off the
+branches, or at the most, only strike at the body of the corrupt
+tree, while the roots remain untouched and uninjured. But when this
+last testimony goes forth, the very roots of the corrupt tree will
+be attacked." P. 426.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page283" name="page283"></a>[pg
+283]</span>
+<p>"Every sect is under an idea that whenever the Lord comes to
+establish truth in the earth, it will be to establish their creed,
+raise up their sect, and bring the whole world into their way. And
+when the faithful witnesses whom God will raise up shall openly
+declare that they have all gone out of the way, that the greatest
+professors have so much of guile, selfishness and party spirit
+about them as to be nothing but hypocrites, and that a person must
+be better than they are or be lost forever; that sects are an
+abomination to the Lord; denounce eternal death upon every advocate
+and adherent of men-made establishments; ... I say when such a
+testimony as this goes forth, as it sooner or later will, no wonder
+that the sects, all with one accord, should set themselves against
+it&mdash;should call it heresy&mdash;declare it will ruin the
+churches if it is not suppressed.... Although, as I have before
+testified, I am only as the voice of one crying in the
+wilderness&mdash;a mere babe in the knowledge of these things which
+are to be revealed hereafter, yet I expect to raise a host of
+bigots and hypocrites against me.... Nor can it be very long before
+the true light, in a very especial manner, will shine.... If these
+things do not come to pass, then let me be called an enthusiast or
+a deceiver." Pp. 444-446.</p>
+<a name="chap14-14" id="chap14-14"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>14. And I looked, and behold a white cloud, and upon the cloud
+one sat like unto the Son of man, having on his head a golden
+crown, and in his hand a sharp sickle.</p>
+<p>15. And another angel came out of the temple, crying with a loud
+voice to him that sat on the cloud, Thrust in thy sickle, and reap:
+for the time has come for thee to reap; for the harvest of the
+earth is ripe.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page284" name="page284"></a>[pg
+284]</span>
+<p>16. And he that sat on the cloud thrust in his sickle on the
+earth; and the earth was reaped.</p>
+<p>17. And another angel came out of the temple which is in heaven,
+he also having a sharp sickle.</p>
+<p>18. And another angel came out from the altar, which had power
+over fire; and cried with a loud cry to him that had the sharp
+sickle, saying, Thrust in thy sharp sickle, and gather the clusters
+of the vine of the earth; for her grapes are fully ripe.</p>
+<p>19. And the angel thrust in his sickle into the earth, and
+gathered the vine of the earth, and cast it into the great
+winepress of the wrath of God.</p>
+<p>20. And the winepress was trodden without the city, and blood
+came out of the winepress, even unto the horse bridles, by the
+space of a thousand and six hundred furlongs.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The special characters of this vision and their work have been
+very difficult for me to identify positively. Until clearer light
+on the matter is received, I choose to withhold an explanation
+rather than to indulge in speculation. Its usual explanation is to
+apply the gathering of the harvest of the earth to the work of the
+reformation now taking place and the vintage scene to the final
+destruction of the wicked, their punishment being symbolized by the
+treading of the "winepress of the wrath of God." This may be its
+signification. It is certain, however, that in a subsequent
+chapter, the final judgment of the wicked is symbolized by the
+treading of "the wine-press of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty
+God." Beyond this I can not now speak with certainty.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page285" name="page285"></a>[pg
+285]</span> <a name="chap15" id="chap15"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+<a name="chap15-1" id="chap15-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And I saw another sign in heaven, great and marvelous, seven
+angels having the seven last plagues; for in them is filled up the
+wrath of God.</p>
+<a name="chap15-2" id="chap15-2"></a>
+<p>2. And I saw as it were a sea of glass mingled with fire: and
+them that had gotten the victory over the beast, and over his
+image, and over his mark, and over the number of his name, stand on
+the sea of glass, having the harps of God.</p>
+<p>3. And they sing the song of Moses the servant of God, and the
+song of the Lamb, saying, Great and marvellous are thy works, Lord
+God Almighty; just and true are thy ways, thou King of saints.</p>
+<p>4. Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? for
+thou only art holy: for all nations shall come and worship before
+thee; for thy judgments are made manifest:</p>
+<a name="chap15-5" id="chap15-5"></a>
+<p>5. And after that I looked, and, behold, the temple of the
+tabernacle of the testimony in heaven was opened:</p>
+<p>6. And the seven angels came out of the temple, having the seven
+plagues, clothed in pure and white linen, and having their breasts
+girded with golden girdles.</p>
+<p>7. And one of the four beasts gave unto the seven angels seven
+golden vials full of the wrath of God, who liveth for ever and
+ever.</p>
+<p>8. And the temple was filled with smoke from the glory of God,
+and from his power; and no man was able to enter into the temple,
+till the seven plagues of the seven angels were fulfilled.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The scene presented to us in this vision is but an introduction
+to the solemn scenes of awful judgment <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page286" name="page286"></a>[pg 286]</span> immediately following.
+The first thing that attracted John's attention was a sign, great
+and marvelous, "seven angels having the seven last plagues." The
+reason why these are denominated the "last plagues" is because that
+"in them is filled up the wrath of God." These are the completion,
+then, the finishing up of the work of divine judgment against the
+persecutors of the church. When the last one is poured out the work
+is done, the time of judgment is over. These angels are not
+designed to symbolize any agencies on earth, for they do not appear
+on earth; they are simply the conductors of the Revelation. God
+never commissions his people on earth to perform such great
+judgments upon their persecutors as the temporal judgments of the
+seven last plagues will be shown to be; but, on the contrary, he
+has given them the express command not to avenge themselves, but to
+suffer wrong. He himself lays exclusive claim to this prerogative,
+saying, "Vengeance is <i>mine</i>; I will repay, saith the Lord."
+Rom. 12:19.</p>
+<p>As soon as the subject of the plagues is introduced and before
+they are poured out, the narrative suddenly changes and a short
+history of God's redeemed saints is given. This, perhaps, thus
+occurs for two reasons&mdash;to assist us in fixing the chronology
+of the events described and to encourage us with the thought that,
+even while the awful judgments of God are being "made manifest"
+upon the haughty oppressors of earth, God has a chosen people who
+have "gotten the victory over the beast, and over his image, and
+over his mark, and over the number of his name." They stand upon
+the "sea of glass, having the harps of God"&mdash;a symbol of
+melody and praise&mdash;and sing <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page287" name="page287"></a>[pg 287]</span> the song of Moses and
+the song of the Lamb. The song of Moses was that sung by the
+Israelites when they had escaped to the further side of the Red
+Sea, thus securing perfect deliverance from their enemies. So,
+also, this company of worshipers sing a great song of
+deliverance&mdash;deliverance from the beast and his image. In
+chapters 4 and 5 John saw the great host redeemed before the
+apostasy standing on this sea of glass, singing the song of
+redemption&mdash;the song of the Lamb&mdash;but this company are
+enabled to sing another song as well&mdash;the song of
+deliverance&mdash;for they have "gotten the victory over the beast,
+and over his image, and over his mark, and over the number of his
+name." Halleluiah! "Great and marvelous are thy works, Lord God
+Almighty; just and true are thy ways, thou King of saints."</p>
+<p>As before stated (chap. <a href="#chap8-3">8:3</a>), the
+heavenly world as opened up to John appeared symbolized after the
+sanctuary of the temple. By "the temple of the tabernacle of the
+testimony," out of which the seven angels came fully prepared for
+their work, is meant the most holy place of the sanctuary, called
+"the tabernacle of the testimony" because there was deposited in
+it, beneath the wings of the cherubim, the ark of the testimony, or
+God's covenant. It was therefore as from the most holy place of the
+sanctuary&mdash;from the very presence of the Deity&mdash;that
+these angels went forth commissioned to execute the seven last
+plagues. This shows that they went by the divine command as
+ministers of vengeance. The purity and beauty of their attire
+denoted both the spotless excellency of their characters and the
+justice of the work in which they were to engage. Although theirs
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page288" name="page288"></a>[pg
+288]</span> was a work of awful avenging judgment, still the
+garments they wore would not be soiled thereby; and their flowing
+robes of white were girded up with a beautiful golden girdle.
+Therefore there is no inconsistency between the purity and love of
+God and the work of his vengeance. It would seem to human reasoning
+that the two are irreconcilable, but these symbols teach
+differently.</p>
+<p>These angels received their vials (goblets) of wrath at the
+hands of one of the four living creatures, who are symbols of the
+redeemed sons of earth. Their deliverance by one of these doubtless
+denotes that these judgments were to be executed in their behalf
+and in answer to their prayers. For centuries the wrath of deadly
+persecutors had been poured out upon God's people, until the cry
+ascended from the lips of the martyrs, "How long, O Lord, holy and
+true, dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell
+on the earth?" Chap. <a href="#chap6-10">6:10</a>. Now their prayer
+is answered, and by their hand, as it were, the vials of wrath are
+delivered with the divine sanction unto the seven angels to be
+poured out upon these proud oppressors of the Lord's people. These
+vials, too, were "full of wrath." What a fearful expression!
+<i>Full of wrath</i>, even "<i>the wrath of God</i>, who liveth
+forever and ever." There was nothing in them but wrath and that to
+the very brim.</p>
+<p>As soon as the vials were delivered, "the temple was filled with
+smoke from the glory of God." This symbol is taken from the
+Shekinah which filled the ancient tabernacle. We read that when the
+tabernacle was finished, "a cloud covered the tent of the
+congregation, and the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page289" name="page289"></a>[pg
+289]</span> And Moses was not able to enter into the tent of the
+congregation, because the cloud abode thereon, and the glory of the
+Lord filled the tabernacle." Ex. 40:34, 35. The same thing occurred
+at the dedication of Solomon's temple. "The cloud filled the house
+of the Lord, so that the priests could not stand to minister
+because of the cloud: for the glory of the Lord had filled the
+house of the Lord." 1 Kings 8:10, 11. So, also, in the symbol
+before us the glory of God filled the temple so that no man was
+able to enter. This is intended to set forth the fact that these
+avenging judgments were for the manifestation of the divine glory
+and that there was no access to the throne of God nor to his
+mercy-seat to alter them or to stay their execution. Such is the
+sublime scene presented to our view preparatory to the pouring out
+of the seven last great plagues.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page290" name="page290"></a>[pg
+290]</span> <a name="chap16" id="chap16"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+<a name="chap16-1" id="chap16-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And I heard a great voice out of the temple saying to the seven
+angels, Go your ways, and pour out the vials of the wrath of God
+upon the earth.</p>
+<p>2. And the first went, and poured out his vial upon the earth;
+and there fell a noisome and grievous sore upon the men which had
+the mark of the beast, and upon them which worshipped his
+image.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>A great voice out of the temple, now filled with the glory of
+the divine presence, commanded the seven angels to enter upon their
+mission. It came, therefore, from God, who alone fixed the time for
+these judgments to begin.</p>
+<p>Before an intelligent explanation of these plagues can be given,
+however, the following points must be made clear: 1. <i>Where</i>
+the vials were poured out. 2. <i>Upon whom</i> they were emptied.
+3. <i>Why</i> they were thus poured out. 4. <i>When</i> they were
+fulfilled, or, rather, at what time they began to be fulfilled.
+These points we will first briefly consider in the order named,
+after which we will discuss the <i>nature</i> of the plagues and
+their individual application.</p>
+<p>1. The place where these vials of wrath were poured out was
+"upon the earth"; that is, the Apocalyptic earth, or that portion
+of the earth made the special subject of Apocalyptic vision;
+namely, the territory of the ten kingdoms. The last two vials,
+however, will be found to embrace a larger territory.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page291" name="page291"></a>[pg
+291]</span>
+<p>2. They were poured out upon those "which had the mark of the
+beast, and upon them which worshiped his image." It has already
+been shown that the image made by the second beast of chapter 13
+was the Protestant ecclesiastical organizations; hence the "beast"
+here referred to, to which the image was made, must signify the
+ecclesiastical hierarchy of Rome, the original. So the plagues fell
+upon the adherents of both organized Romanism and Protestantism in
+Europe.</p>
+<p>3. The reason why the judgments of the first three vials
+especially descended upon them was because "they had shed the blood
+of saints and prophets." Verse 6. That Romanism was a fierce
+oppressor of God's people has already been noticed: Protestantism
+as their persecutor, also, must now be considered further.
+Protestant sects after they first became established and got power
+in their own hands, acted much in the same manner as the church of
+Rome did before them, persecuting, banishing, imprisoning, and even
+putting to death those who refused to receive their tenets or to
+conform to the system of religion they had adopted. The Lutherans,
+at first a pious, persecuted people, on becoming numerous and
+exalted by the favor of the great, established a certain system of
+religion and then, when it was in their power, persecuted,
+imprisoned, banished, or put to death all that dissented. As early
+after the Reformation as 1574, in a convention at Torgaw, they
+established the real presence in the eucharist and instigated the
+Elector of Saxony to seize, imprison, and banish all the secret
+Calvinists that differed from them in sentiment, and to reduce
+their followers by every act <span class="pagenum"><a id="page292"
+name="page292"></a>[pg 292]</span> of violence, to renounce their
+sentiments and to confess the ubiquity. Peucer, for his opinions,
+suffered ten years of imprisonment in the severest manner. In 1577
+a form of concord was produced in which the real manducation of
+Christ's body and blood in the eucharist was established and heresy
+and excommunication laid on all that refused this as an article of
+faith, with pains and penalties to be enforced by the secular arm.
+Crellius, in 1601, was put to death.</p>
+<p>In Switzerland, before the city of Zurich was entirely safe
+itself from the encroachments of Romanism, its Protestant council
+condemned a young man named Felix Mantz to be drowned because he
+insisted that the baby-sprinkling of Romanism was not baptism and
+that all who had received the rite ought to be immersed. This
+sentence was carried into effect. The severest laws were passed in
+different countries of Europe against the Anabaptists, and large
+numbers were banished or burnt at the stake. See Encyclop&aelig;dia
+Britannica, Art. Anabaptists. Protestants may claim this was
+because of their fanaticism on other lines; but it remains a fact,
+nevertheless, that the chief sentiment at the base of these laws
+was religious persecution and that Protestants sanctioned and
+carried them into execution.</p>
+<p>King Henry VIII., the founder of the Established Church in
+England, adopted the most stringent laws to enforce its doctrines.
+Certain articles of religion were drawn up, known in history as the
+"Bloody Six Articles." Concerning these the People's
+Cyclop&aelig;dia says: "The doctrines were substantially those of
+the Roman Catholic Church. Whoever denied the first articles (that
+embodying the doctrine of transubstantiation) <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page293" name="page293"></a>[pg 293]</span> was to
+be declared a heretic, and burnt without opportunity of abjuration;
+whoso spoke against the other five articles should, for the first
+offense, forfeit his property; and whosoever refused to abjure his
+first offense, or committed a second, was to die like a felon."
+Art. Henry VIII. "The royal reformer persecuted alike Catholics and
+Protestants. Thus, on one occasion, three Catholics who denied that
+the king was the rightful head of the church, and three Protestants
+who disputed the doctrine of the real presence in the sacrament,...
+were dragged on the same sled to the place of execution." In
+speaking of that period of history and of the religious
+persecutions of the times, Myers says: "Punishment of heresy was
+then regarded, by both Catholics and Protestants alike, as a duty
+which could be neglected by those in authority only at the peril of
+Heaven's displeasure. Believing this, those of that age could
+consistently do nothing less than labor to exterminate heresy with
+axe, sword and fagot." General History, p. 553.</p>
+<p>That religious intolerance even at a later date was practised in
+England, witness the twelve years' imprisonment of John Bunyan and
+the hundreds confined in jails throughout that country for not
+conforming to the established religion. It was such severe
+persecution by that early Protestant sect that drove the Puritans
+from England's fair country to the then inhospitable shores of
+America, that they might have an opportunity to worship God
+according to the dictates of their own conscience. In Scotland the
+Covenanters "insisted on their right to worship God in their own
+way. They were therefore subjected <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page294" name="page294"></a>[pg 294]</span> to most cruel and
+unrelenting persecution. They were hunted by English troopers over
+their native moors and among the wild recesses of their mountains,
+whither they secretly retired for prayer and worship. The tales of
+the suffering of the Scotch Covenanters at the hands of the English
+Protestants form a most harrowing chapter of the records of the
+ages of religious persecution." This list might be considerably
+augmented, but it is unnecessary. However, that Protestant
+persecution and tyranny should never reach the enormous extent of
+the Romanists before them is proved by the fact that her horns were
+"like a lamb." Chap. <a href="#chap13-11">13:11</a>.</p>
+<p>4. It is very important for us to ascertain the <i>time</i> for
+the beginning of these plagues; for they can not be identified
+unless we understand the chronology of the events described. It is
+a fact no one can question that the seventh plague is the judgment
+of the last day, for in the seven "is filled up" the wrath of God;
+hence they are denominated the <i>last</i> plagues. It is also a
+fact, well-known to all who are spiritual and who understand the
+truth in the present reformation, that certain events said to occur
+under the period of the sixth plague are <i>now</i> taking place;
+namely, the confederation of all false religions to oppose the
+people of God, led on by the "unclean spirits" that come "out of
+the mouth of the dragon, and out of the mouth of the beast, and out
+of the mouth of the false prophet." Verses 13, 14.</p>
+<p>Therefore five of the plagues precede the time in which we are
+now living. It is evident that the plagues could not begin before
+the reformation; for the vials were poured out upon the "image of
+the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page295" name="page295"></a>[pg
+295]</span> beast"&mdash;Protestantism&mdash;also. Hence we are
+directed to some period between the sixteenth century and the
+present day for their commencement. The reason <i>why</i> the first
+judgments especially were poured out will assist us in determining
+the starting-point&mdash;"They have shed the blood of saints and
+prophets." This expression seems to indicate that the time for the
+plagues to begin was after Romanism and Protestantism ceased
+putting people to death because of their religious sentiments. That
+this is the correct idea is clearly proved by what was said to the
+martyrs when they cried unto God for the avenging of their blood on
+them that dwell on the earth. "And it was said unto them, that they
+should rest yet for a little season, until their fellow-servants
+also and their brethren, that should be killed as they were, should
+be fulfilled." Chap. 6:10, 11. For additional information
+concerning the terrible persecutions that followed the Sixteenth
+Century Reformation, see remarks on chapter <a href=
+"#chap6-10">6:10, 11</a>.</p>
+<p>We must now determine about what time the great persecutions
+referred to ceased, or nearly ceased, and that will give us the
+right starting-point from which to reckon the pouring out of the
+first vial. In A.D. 1685 the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, by
+Louis XIV. of France, took place, and in the terrible persecutions
+that occurred during his reign three hundred thousand are said to
+have lost their lives. The time that we are endeavoring to
+establish, then, must be later than the seventeenth century. Louis
+died in 1714. Persecutions continued from time to time in France,
+with considerable severity, until about the middle of the century.
+"Soon after this ... the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page296"
+name="page296"></a>[pg 296]</span> flowing of heretic blood ceased,
+though an effort was made in 1765 by the Popish clergy to resist
+the tendency to toleration by a remonstrance to the king." History
+of Romanism, p. 608. A few individual cases of persecution may have
+occurred later in other countries; but in the main we are safe in
+pointing to about the middle of the eighteenth century for the
+general cessation of these religious <i>murders</i>. We will now
+consider the nature of the first plague.</p>
+<p>The pouring out of this vial produced the most painful malignant
+ulcers upon the human body. Such ulcers are evidently not political
+calamities; for the symbol is drawn, not from nature, but from
+human life. Still, it is not drawn from a human being as a whole
+(in which case religious events would be symbolized), but only from
+his body. What, then, is the analagous object of which the human
+body may stand as a proper representative? Evidently, the mind. We
+would naturally pass from the bodily to the mental; and what
+painful ulcers are to the one, marring its beauty and filling it
+with burning anguish, such are blasphemous opinions and malignant
+principles to the other.</p>
+<p>Considering the time for this plague pointed out above, the
+student of Revelation who is acquainted with the history of the
+past will scarcely fail to discern at once, in the striking points
+of this symbol, those horrible principles of infidelity, atheism,
+and licentiousness, which were spread so extensively over Europe
+during the latter half of the eighteenth century, and which were
+the most efficient causes in bringing about the fearful convulsions
+which followed in the French Revolution. That all may understand
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page297" name="page297"></a>[pg
+297]</span> this matter in its proper light, however, it will be
+necessary to state some of the facts respecting this "noisome and
+grievous sore" that fell at that time upon the inhabitants of
+Europe. In writing upon the causes that led up to the French
+Revolution, Mr. Wickes gathered the following facts of history
+mainly from the Encyclop&aelig;dia of Religious Knowledge, under
+the articles headed <i>Philosophists</i> and <i>Illuminati</i>. I
+will quote his own language, as it is very pointed.</p>
+<p>"Philosophists was a name given to several persons in France,
+who entered into a combination to overthrow the religion of Jesus,
+and eradicate from the human heart every religious sentiment. The
+man more particularly to whom this idea first occurred, was
+Voltaire, who being weary (as he said himself) of hearing it
+repeated that twelve men were sufficient to establish Christianity,
+resolved to prove that one might be sufficient to overturn it. Full
+of this project, he swore, before the year 1730, to devote his life
+to its accomplishment, and for some time he flattered himself that
+he should enjoy alone the glory of destroying the Christian
+religion. He found, however, that associates would be necessary;
+and from the numerous tribe of his admirers and disciples, he chose
+D'Alembert and Diderot, as the most proper persons to co-operate
+with him in his designs. He contrived also to enlist Frederick II.,
+king of Prussia, who became one of his most zealous coadjutors,
+until he found that Voltaire was waging war with the throne as well
+as the altar. This, indeed, was not originally Voltaire's
+intention. He was vain; from natural disposition an aristocrat, and
+an admirer of royalty. But when he found that almost every
+sovereign but <span class="pagenum"><a id="page298" name=
+"page298"></a>[pg 298]</span> Frederick disapproved of his
+ambitious designs, as soon as he perceived their issue, he
+determined to oppose all the governments on earth rather than
+forfeit the glory with which he flattered himself, of vanquishing
+Christ and his apostles in the field of controversy.</p>
+<p>"He now set himself, with his associates, D'Alembert and
+Diderot, to excite universal discontent with the established order
+of things. For this purpose, they formed secret societies, assumed
+new names, and employed an enigmatical language. In their secret
+meetings they professed to celebrate the mysteries of
+<i>Mythra</i>; and their great object, as they professed to one
+another, was to confound the wretch, meaning Jesus Christ. Hence
+their secret watchword was 'Crush the wretch.' The following are
+some of their doctrines, as found in their books expressly designed
+for general circulation. Sometimes standing out in their naked
+horror, at other times enveloped in sophistry and disguise. The
+Universal Cause, that God of the philosophers, of the Jews, and of
+the Christians, is but a chimera and a phantom&mdash;The phenomena
+of nature only prove the existence of God to a few prepossessed
+men&mdash;It is more reasonable to admit, with Manes, of a two-fold
+God, than of the God of Christianity&mdash;We can not know whether
+a God really exists, or whether there is any difference between
+good and evil, or vice and virtue&mdash;Nothing can be more absurd
+than to believe the soul a spiritual being&mdash;The immortality of
+the soul, so far from stimulating men to the practise of virtue, is
+nothing but a barbarous, desperate, fatal tenet, and contrary to
+all legislation&mdash;All ideas of justice and injustice, of virtue
+and vice, of glory and infamy, are purely arbitrary, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page299" name="page299"></a>[pg 299]</span> and
+dependent on custom&mdash;Conscience and remorse are nothing but
+the foresight of those physical penalties to which crimes expose
+us&mdash;The man who is above the law, can commit, without remorse,
+the dishonest act that may serve his purpose&mdash;The fear of God,
+so far from being the beginning of wisdom, should be the beginning
+of folly&mdash;The command to love one's parents is more the work
+of education than of nature&mdash;Modesty is only an invention of
+refined voluptuousness&mdash;The law which condemns married people
+to live together, becomes barbarous and cruel on the day they cease
+to love one another.</p>
+<p>"Such were the atrocious sentiments, though sometimes artfully
+veiled, which were disseminated in their books, and which,
+spreading all over Europe, imperceptibly took possession of the
+public mind, and prepared the way for the subversion of religion,
+morals, and government. As soon as the sale of the works was
+sufficient to pay expenses, inferior editions were printed and
+given away, or sold at a very low price; circulating libraries of
+them were formed, and reading societies instituted. While they
+constantly denied these productions to the world, they contrived to
+give them a false celebrity through their confidential agents and
+correspondents, who were not themselves always trusted with the
+entire secret.</p>
+<p>"By degrees they got possession nearly of all the reviews and
+periodical publications; established a general intercourse, by
+means of hawkers and pedlars, with the distant provinces; and
+instituted an office to supply all schools with teachers; and thus
+did they acquire unprecedented dominion over every species of
+literature, over the minds of all ranks of people, and <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page300" name="page300"></a>[pg 300]</span> the
+education of the youth, without giving any alarm to the world. The
+lovers of wit and polite literature were caught by Voltaire; the
+men of science were perverted, and children corrupted in the first
+rudiments of learning, by D'Alembert and Diderot; stronger
+appetites were fed by the secret club of Baron Holbach; the
+imaginations of the higher orders were set dangerously afloat by
+Montesquieu; and the multitude of all ranks was surprised,
+confounded, and hurried away by Rousseau. Thus was the public mind
+in France completely corrupted, and the way prepared for the
+dreadful scenes that followed."</p>
+<p>But there is also another chapter to the dark history of this
+"noisome and grievous sore." The same author says again:</p>
+<p>"After Voltaire had broached his system of infidel philosophy,
+and brought it unto perfection, it was taken up by the celebrated
+Dr. Adam Weishaupt, professor of canon law in the University of
+Ingolstadt, and by him perfected as a system of light or
+illuminism. On the 1st of May, 1776, he founded, among the students
+of the above-named University, a secret society under the name of
+the <i>Illuminati</i>, whose avowed object was to diffuse the light
+of science, these secret societies being so many radiating centers
+of light. But the science taught was the most atrocious infidelity,
+and its object the overturning of all government and religion. Free
+masonry, being in high repute all over Europe when Weishaupt first
+formed the plan of his society, he availed himself of its secrecy
+to introduce his new order, which rapidly spread, by the efforts of
+its founders and disciples, through all those countries, and found
+its way even to the United States. It <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page301" name="page301"></a>[pg 301]</span> would not be possible
+here to give even an outline of the nature and constitution of this
+extraordinary society&mdash;of its secrets and mysteries&mdash;of
+the deep dissimulation, consummate hypocrisy, and shocking impiety
+of its founder and his associates&mdash;of their Jesuitical arts in
+concealing their real objects, and their incredible industry and
+astonishing exertions in making converts&mdash;of the absolute
+despotism and complete system of <i>espionage</i> established
+throughout the order&mdash;of the blind obedience exacted of the
+<i>novices</i>, and the absolute power of life and death assumed by
+the order and conceded by the novices&mdash;of the pretended
+morality, real blasphemies, and absolute atheism of the founder and
+his tried friends. Reference can only be made to these things as
+well-established facts.</p>
+<p>"It is important here to bear in mind one or two facts, in order
+to realize what an engine of corruption this secret organization of
+the <i>Illuminati</i> was. One fact is, the high popularity which
+these secret societies at that period enjoyed. It was unbounded.
+There is something which commends such secret organizations most
+powerfully to the depraved human nature. Men love them because they
+are secret, and because they can wield such tremendous power. The
+other fact to be considered, is the absence, to a such vast extent,
+of the controlling elements of true religion in the European mind,
+and its predisposition to skepticism. The Reformation of the
+Sixteenth Century had broken the shackles of priestly Papal
+superstition over the human mind; and [true] evangelical doctrine
+not being introduced to supply the vacuum, the mass swung readily
+over from the regions of dark <span class="pagenum"><a id="page302"
+name="page302"></a>[pg 302]</span> superstition to blank atheism.
+Thus were the elements ready prepared to hand for such spirits as
+Voltaire, D'Alembert, Diderot, Weishaupt, and others, to work upon,
+and by reason of their secret powerful agencies, to mould to their
+own liking.</p>
+<p>"It was now this damning system of infidelity, under the
+specious name of philosophy, light, and science, spread with such
+untiring industry over the European mind, that unhinged the whole
+framework of society, and prepared it, like a vast magazine, for an
+awful explosion. All the principles that held society together in
+the fear of God and future retribution&mdash;regard for human
+law&mdash;respect for magistrates, parents, and the
+marriage-tie&mdash;yea, in the very distinctions of virtue and
+vice, had been unsettled or taken away. They had been reasoned down
+and laughed out of the world; and when these only restraints, which
+God has imposed upon human selfishness and passion were removed,
+what was then to hold back those fierce passions and that deep
+selfishness from the most unbounded excesses? God was no more
+feared&mdash;government was no more sacred&mdash;religion was a
+delusion&mdash;immorality was a lie&mdash;virtue was a
+name&mdash;the marriage-tie was a farce&mdash;modesty was refined
+voluptuousness: and when men were persuaded of these things,
+society began to roll and heave under the long swells of that
+portentous storm of wrath which was soon to break, in all its
+desolating fury, over the earth."</p>
+<p>In the facts here presented it may be seen how far we are
+justified in applying to them this first vial of wrath. The vial
+was poured out "upon the earth"&mdash;on the inhabitants of the ten
+kingdoms when in a <span class="pagenum"><a id="page303" name=
+"page303"></a>[pg 303]</span> state of tranquility. This was their
+condition, unsuspicious of danger, when the dread infection was
+spread through society. According to the testimony of Pres. Dwight,
+within ten years from the first establishment of the Illuminati, in
+1776, "they were established in great numbers through Germany,
+Sweden, Prussia, Poland, Austria, Holland, France, Switzerland,
+Italy, England, Scotland, and America. They spread with a rapidity
+which nothing but fact could have induced any sober mind to
+believe."</p>
+<p>This system of infidelity is well symbolized by a noisome,
+grevious ulcer, which is loathsome to the sight, offensive to the
+smell, corrupting to the body, and productive of awful pain. That
+it appeared so to others besides the author of the Revelation is
+shown by the following epithets which Burke, the celebrated English
+orator, applied to the spirit of the French Revolution, which was
+only the discharged virus of these ulcers. He styled it "the fever
+of Jacobinism;" "the epidemic of atheistical fanaticism;" "an evil
+lying deep in the corruptions of human nature;" "such a plague,
+that the precaution of the most severe quarantine ought to be
+established against it." The result, he says, was "the corruption
+of all morals," "the decomposition of all society." What greater
+plague could fall upon Romanism and Protestantism than this fearful
+scourge of infidelity?</p>
+<p>I have dwelt for a considerable length of time upon this
+subject, because of its deep interest, and also because I desired
+to verify the application of the symbol as much as possible, on
+account of its close connection with the pouring out of the vials
+which follow.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page304" name="page304"></a>[pg
+304]</span> <a name="chap16-3" id="chap16-3"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>3. And the second angel poured out his vial upon the sea; and it
+became as the blood of a dead man: and every living soul died in
+the sea.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This vial was poured out upon the "sea." The sea is a large body
+of water within the earth, subject to violent storms and
+agitations. As a symbol it would denote some central power or
+kingdom within the symbolic earth in a state of revolution. The
+effects produced by this vial were two-fold&mdash;the waters were
+changed into blood as of a dead man, and all the living creatures
+in the sea died. The waters of the sea represent the inhabitants of
+this kingdom (see a similar explanation of <i>water</i> in chap.
+<a href="#chap17-15">17:15</a>) as the earth does the inhabitants
+of the empire, or the ten kingdoms. The living creatures in the
+sea, therefore, could signify the rulers and princes of the
+kingdom, as they bear an analagous relation to the people that
+fishes do to the waters. The statement that the waters of the sea
+became "as the blood of a dead man" is doubtless intended to
+signify a much more dreadful state of things than if they had
+simply been changed to blood. They were converted into black and
+poisonous, or corrupt, blood. This denotes the vast slaughter and
+massacre of the inhabitants of this kingdom; while the death of the
+living creatures denotes the extinction of those in power.</p>
+<p>It may appear at first that making the conversion of water into
+blood a symbol of bloodshed is adopting the literal method of
+interpretation; but not so, and for the following reason: The
+symbol is taken from nature, the waters of the sea representing the
+inhabitants of the kingdom. The waters are changed into an
+unnatural state or element, that of blood, and this <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page305" name="page305"></a>[pg 305]</span> change
+denotes an analagous one passing upon the inhabitants. Their
+continuing in life would be their remaining as waters: their
+massacre and destruction would be the waters changed to
+blood&mdash;a horrible and unnatural element. Likewise, the death
+of the living things in the sea is a similar destruction overtaking
+the kings, rulers, and princes.</p>
+<p>With our understanding of the nature of the first vial, which
+prepared the way for the pouring out of this one, we shall have no
+difficulty whatever in identifying this symbol with the terrible
+convulsions of the French Revolution. It followed as a necessary
+consequence of the first. Voltaire and his coadjutors had insulted
+and trampled in the dust everything held sacred in human eyes, and
+this fully prepared the way for the scenes of terror that
+followed.</p>
+<p>In studying these vials the reader should bear in mind
+constantly the reason <i>why</i> they were sent as judgments upon
+the nations of Europe&mdash;because of their former oppression of
+God's people. From the days when the Popes received their first
+temporal authority at the hands of the Carlovingian king, Pepin and
+Charlemagne, France<a id="footnotetag11" name=
+"footnotetag11"></a><a href="#footnote11"><sup>11</sup></a>
+constituted the real backbone of the Papacy, the very center of her
+power and authority, as all history will show. In the fourteenth
+century the Papal seat was removed from Rome to Avignon, in France,
+where it remained for about seventy years. During this period all
+the Popes <span class="pagenum"><a id="page306" name=
+"page306"></a>[pg 306]</span> were French, and "all their policies
+were shaped and controlled by the French kings." To write a history
+of the Papacy during the Dark Ages is to outline the history of
+France, so closely are their affairs interwoven. Hence it is only
+natural that she should be symbolized as the "sea" in this part of
+the Apocalypse, with the other nations as tributaries. Ver. 4-6.
+That the French Revolution was in its effects a terrible blow to
+the thrones of despotism throughout Europe is shown by the
+following quotation from the Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica: "We are
+coming to the verge of the French Revolution, which <i>surpasses
+all other revolutions the world has seen</i> in its completeness,
+the largeness of its theatre, the long preparation for it ... its
+<i>influence on the modern history of Europe</i>." Art. France.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote11" name=
+"footnote11"></a><b>Footnote 11:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag11">(return)</a>
+<p>Pepin and Charlemagne were, properly speaking, simply German
+princes reigning in Gaul. The kingdom of France is usually dated
+from the accession of the first of the Capetian kings, late in the
+tenth century, 987. However, the Frankish nation, of whom the
+Carlovingian kings were leaders, laid the foundation of the French
+kingdom and gave a new name to Gaul&mdash;France.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This revolution commenced on the fifth of May, 1789, in the
+Convocation of the States General, for the redress of grievances
+and the extrication of the government and nation from the
+difficulties under which they were laboring. A conflict had been
+going on between despotism and popular rights, the throne and
+nobility contending for absolute power, and the people, for
+freedom. But when in this encounter the popular party triumphed,
+there was no fear of God before the eyes of those who seized the
+reins of government. The infidelity of Voltaire and his associates
+had removed the last restraint upon human passion, and the scenes
+of terror that followed are without a parallel in history. The king
+was condemned to death and executed. The barbarous execution of the
+queen, Marie Antoinette, followed in about six months, and this was
+immediately succeeded by the decree of <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page307" name="page307"></a>[pg 307]</span> the National
+Convention, of the most infamous character, that of the violation
+of the tombs of St. Dennis and the profanation of the sepulchres of
+the kings of France. I will quote from Sir A. Alison's noted
+History of Europe:</p>
+<p>"By a decree of the Convention, these venerable asylums of
+departed greatness were ordered to be destroyed.... A furious
+multitude precipitated itself out of Paris; the tombs of Henry IV.,
+of Francis I., and of Louis XII., were ransacked, and their bones
+scattered in the air. Even the glorious name of Turenne could not
+protect his grave from spoilation. His remains were almost
+undecayed, as when he received the fatal wound on the banks of the
+Lech. The bones of Charles V., the savior of his country, were
+dispersed. At his feet was found the coffin of the faithful Du
+Gueselin, and the French hands profaned the skeleton before which
+English invasion had rolled back. Most of these tombs were found to
+be strongly secured. Much time, and no small exertion of skill and
+labor, were required to burst their barriers. They would have
+resisted forever the decay of time or the violence of enemies; they
+yielded to the fury of domestic dissension. This was followed
+immediately by a general attack upon the monuments and remains of
+antiquity throughout all France. The sepulchres of the great of
+past ages, of the barons and generals of the feudal ages, of the
+paladins, and of the crusaders, were involved in one
+undistinguished ruin. It seemed as if the glories of antiquity were
+forgotten, or sought to be buried in oblivion. The tomb of Du
+Gueselin shared the same fate as that of Louis XIV. The skulls of
+monarchs and heroes were tossed about <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page308" name="page308"></a>[pg 308]</span> like foot balls by the
+profane multitude; like the grave-diggers in Hamlet, they made a
+jest of the lips before which the nations had trembled."</p>
+<p>Having begun by waging this profane warfare upon their own
+glorious dead, another scene of the fatal drama immediately
+succeeded. The same author continues: "Having massacred the great
+of the present and insulted the illustrious of former ages, nothing
+remained to the revolutionists but to direct their vengeance
+against heaven itself. Pache, Hebert, and Chaumette, the leaders of
+the municipality publicly expressed their determination 'to
+dethrone the God of heaven, as well as the monarchs of earth.' To
+accomplish this design, they prevailed on Gobet, the apostate
+constitutional bishop of Paris, to appear at the bar of the
+Assembly, accompanied by some of the clergy of his diocese, and
+there abjure the Christian faith. He declared 'that no other
+national religion was now required but that of Liberty, equality,
+and morality.' Many of the constitutional bishops and clergy in the
+Convention joined in the proposition. Crowds of drunken artisans
+and shameless prostitutes crowded to the bar, and trampled under
+their feet the sacred vases, consecrated for ages to the holiest
+purposes of religion. The churches were stripped of all their
+ornaments; their plate and valuable contents brought in heaps to
+the municipality and the Convention, from whence they were sent to
+the mint to be melted down. Trampling under foot the images of our
+Savior and the Virgin, they elevated, amid shouts of applause, the
+busts of Marat and Lepelletier, and danced around them, singing
+parodies on the Halleluiah, and dancing the Carmagnole.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page309" name="page309"></a>[pg
+309]</span>
+<p>"Shortly after a still more indecent exhibition took place
+before the assembly.... Hebert and Chaumette, and their associates,
+appeared at the bar and declared 'that God did not exist, and that
+the worship of Reason was to be substituted in his stead.' A veiled
+female, arrayed in blue drapery, was brought into the Assembly; and
+Chaumette, taking her by the hand, 'Mortals,' said he, 'cease to
+tremble before the powerless thunders of a God whom your fears have
+created. Henceforth acknowledge no divinity but Reason. I offer you
+its noblest and purest image; if you must have idols, sacrifice
+only to this.' When, letting fall the veil, he exclaimed, 'Fall
+before the august Senate of Freedom, O Veil of Reason!' At the same
+time, the goddess appeared personified by a celebrated beauty, the
+wife of Momoro, a printer, known in more than one character to most
+of the Convention. The goddess after being embraced by the
+president, was mounted on a magnificent car, and conducted, amid an
+immense crowd, to the cathedral of Notre Dame, to take the place of
+the Deity. There she was elevated on a high altar, and received the
+adoration of all present, while the young women, her attendants,
+whose alluring looks already sufficiently indicated their
+profession, retired into the chapels around the choir, where every
+species of licentiousness and obscenity was indulged in without
+control, with hardly any veil from the public gaze. To such a
+length was this carried, that Robespierre afterward declared that
+Chaumette deserved death for the abominations he had permitted on
+that occasion. Thenceforward that ancient edifice was called the
+<i>Temple of Reason</i>."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page310" name="page310"></a>[pg
+310]</span>
+<p>Such horrible events are sickening to relate; but as I started
+out to describe the condition of this "sea" when it became as the
+blood of a dead man, I must be faithful to the task. God was now
+dethroned; the services of religion abandoned; every tenth day set
+apart for the hellish orgies of atheism and Reason; Marat was
+deified; the instrument of death sanctified by the name "the holy
+Guillotine"; on the public cemeteries was inscribed, "Death is an
+Eternal Sleep"; marriage was a civil contract, binding only during
+the pleasure of the contracting parties. Mademoiselle Arnout, a
+celebrated comedian, expressed the public feeling when she said,
+"<i>Marriage the sacrament of adultery</i>." What an awful harvest
+would be expected of such seed! Alison continues:</p>
+<p>"A Revolutionary Tribunal was formed at Nantes, under the
+direction of Carrier, and it soon outstripped even the rapid march
+of Danton and Robespierre. Their principle was that it was
+necessary to destroy <i>en masse</i>, all the prisoners. At their
+command was formed a corps, called the Legion of Marat, composed of
+the most determined and bloodthirsty of the revolutionists, the
+members of which were entitled, on their own authority, to
+incarcerate any person whom they chose. The number of their
+prisoners was soon between three and four thousand, and they
+divided among themselves all their property. Whenever a further
+supply of captives was wanted, the alarm was spread of a
+counter-revolution, the <i>generale</i> beat, the cannon planted;
+and this was followed immediately by innumerable arrests. Nor were
+they long in disposing of their captives. The miserable wretches
+were either slain with poinards in prison, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page311" name="page311"></a>[pg 311]</span> or
+carried out in a vessel and drowned by wholesale in the Loire. On
+one occasion a hundred 'fanatical priests,' as they were termed,
+were taken out together, striped of their clothes, and precipitated
+into the waters.... Women big with child, infants eight, nine, and
+ten years of age, were thrown together into the stream, on the
+sides of which men, armed with sabres, were placed to cut off their
+heads if the waves should throw them undrowned on the shore.</p>
+<p>"On one occasion, by orders of Carrier, twenty-three of the
+revolutionists, on another twenty-four, were guillotined without
+any trial. The executioner remonstrated, but in vain. Among them
+were many children of seven or eight years of age, and seven women;
+the executioner died two or three days after, with horror at what
+he himself had done. So great was the multitude of captives who
+were brought in on all sides, that the executioners, as well as the
+company of Marat, declared themselves exhausted with fatigue; and a
+new method of disposing of them was adopted, borrowed from Nero,
+but improved on the plan of that tyrant. A hundred or a hundred and
+fifty victims, for the most part women and children, were crowded
+together in a boat, with a concealed trap-door in the bottom, which
+was conducted into the middle of the Loire; at a signal given, the
+crew leaped into another boast, the bolts were withdrawn, and the
+shrieking victims precipitated into the waters, amid the laughter
+of the company of Marat, who stood on the banks to cut down any who
+approached the shore. This was what Carrier called his
+<i>Republican Baptisms</i>. The <i>Republican Marriages</i> were,
+if possible, a still <span class="pagenum"><a id="page312" name=
+"page312"></a>[pg 312]</span> greater refinement of cruelty. Two
+persons of different sexes, bereft of every species of dress, were
+bound together, and after being left in torture in that situation
+for half an hour, thrown into the river. Such was the quantity of
+corpses accumulated in the Loire, that the water of that river was
+affected, so as to render a public ordinance necessary, forbidding
+the use of it to the inhabitants; and the mariners, when they
+heaved their anchors, frequently brought up boats charged with
+corpses. Birds of prey flocked to the shores and fed on human
+flesh; while the very fish became so poisonous, as to induce an
+order of the municipality of Nantes, prohibiting them to be taken
+by the fishermen.</p>
+<p>"The scenes in the prisons which preceded these horrible
+executions exceeded all that romance had figured of the terrible.
+Many women died of terror the moment a man entered their cells,
+conceiving that they were about to be led out to the noyades; the
+floors were covered with the bodies of their infants, numbers of
+whom were yet quivering in the agonies of death. On one occasion,
+the inspector entered the prison to seek for a child, where, the
+evening before, he had left above three hundred infants; they were
+all gone in the morning, having been drowned the preceding night.
+Fifteen thousand persons perished either under the hands of the
+executioner, or of disease in prison, in one month: the total
+victims of the Reign of Terror at that place exceeded thirty
+thousand."</p>
+<p>After narrating scenes of terror in Paris, Alison says again:
+"Such accumulated horrors annihilated all the charities and
+intercourse of life. Before daybreak <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page313" name="page313"></a>[pg 313]</span> the shops of the
+provision merchants were besieged by crowds of women and children,
+clamoring for the food which the law of the <i>maximum</i> in
+general prevented them from obtaining. The farmers trembled to
+bring their fruits to the market, the shop-keepers to expose them
+to sale. The richest quarters of the town were deserted; no
+equipages of crowds of passengers were to be seen on the streets;
+the sinister words, <i>Propriete Nationale</i>, imprinted in large
+characters on the walls, everywhere showed how far the work of
+confiscation had proceeded. Passengers hesitated to address their
+most intimate friends on meeting; the extent of calamity had
+rendered men suspicious even of those they loved most. Every one
+assumed the coarsest dress, and the most squalid appearance; an
+elegant exterior would have been the certain forerunner of
+destruction. At one hour only were any symptoms of animation seen:
+it was when the victims were conveyed to execution; the humane fled
+with horror from the sight, the infuriated rushed in crowds to
+satiate their eyes with the sight of human agony.</p>
+<p>"Night came, but with it no diminution of the anxiety of the
+people. Every family early assembled its members; with trembling
+looks they gazed around the room, fearful that the very walls might
+harbor traitors. The sound of a foot, the stroke of a hammer, a
+voice in the streets, froze all hearts with horror. If a knock was
+heard at the door, every one, in agonized suspense, expected his
+fate. Unable to endure such protracted misery, numbers committed
+suicide. 'Had the reign of Robespierre,' said Freron, 'continued
+longer, multitudes would have thrown <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page314" name="page314"></a>[pg 314]</span> themselves under the
+guillotine; the first of social affections, the love of life, was
+already extinguished in almost every heart.'"</p>
+<p>With one more quotation from this historian I will dismiss this
+horrible theme: "The combination of wicked men who thereafter
+governed France, is without parallel in the history of the world.
+Their power, based on the organized weight of the multitude, and
+the ardent co-operation of the municipalities, everywhere installed
+by them in the position of power, was irresistible. All bowed the
+neck before this gigantic assemblage of wickedness. The
+revolutionary excesses daily increased, in consequence of the union
+which the constant dread of retribution produced among their
+perpetrators. There was no medium between taking part in these
+atrocities, and falling a victim to them. Virtue seemed powerless;
+energy appeared only in the extremity of resignation; religion in
+the heroism of which death was endured. There was not a hope left
+for France, had it not been for the dissentions which, as the
+natural result of their wickedness, sprung up among the authors of
+the public calamities.</p>
+<p>"It is impossible not to be struck, in looking back on the fate
+of these different parties, with the singular and providential
+manner in which their crimes brought about their own punishment. No
+foreign interposition was necessary, no avenging angel was required
+to vindicate the justice of divine administration. They fell the
+victims of their own atrocity, of the passions which they
+themselves had let loose, of the injustice of which they had given
+the first example to others The Constitutionalists overthrew the
+ancient monarchy, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page315" name=
+"page315"></a>[pg 315]</span> and formed a limited government; but
+their imprudence in raising popular ambition paved the way for the
+tenth of August, and speedily brought themselves to the scaffold;
+the Girondists established their favored dream of a republic, and
+were the first victims of the fury which it excited; the Dantonists
+roused the populace against the Gironde, and soon fell under the
+axe which they had prepared for their rivals; the anarchists defied
+the power of 'heaven itself,' but scarce were their blasphemies
+uttered, when they were swept off by the partners of their bloody
+triumphs. One only power remained, alone, terrible, irresistible.
+This was the power of Death, wielded by a faction steeled against
+every feeling of humanity, dead to every principle of justice. In
+their iron hands, order resumed its sway from the influence of
+terror; obedience became universal, from the extinction of hope.
+Silent and unresisted, they led their victims to the scaffold,
+dreaded alike by the soldiers who crouched, the people who
+trembled, and the victims who suffered. The history of the world
+<i>has no parallel</i> to that long night of suffering, because
+<i>it has none to the guilt which preceded it</i>; tyranny never
+assumed so hideous a form, because licentiousness never required so
+severe a punishment."</p>
+<p>Prom this awful description, which might be carried to almost
+any extent, the reader will understand the force of the prophecy
+which declared that the "sea became as the blood of a dead man, and
+every living soul died in the sea."</p>
+<a name="chap16-4" id="chap16-4"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>4. And the third angel poured out his vial upon the rivers and
+fountains of waters; and they became blood.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page316" name="page316"></a>[pg
+316]</span>
+<p>5. And I heard the angel of the waters say, Thou art righteous,
+O Lord, which art, and wast, and shalt be, because thou hast judged
+thus.</p>
+<a name="chap16-6" id="chap16-6"></a>
+<p>6. For they have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and thou
+hast given them blood to drink; for they are worthy.</p>
+<a name="chap16-7" id="chap16-7"></a>
+<p>7. And I heard another out of the altar say, Even so, Lord God
+Almighty, true and righteous are thy judgments.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Fountains and rivers are tributaries to the sea, and thus, they
+symbolize the inferior communities and nations belonging to the
+Apocalyptic earth. France was the great central power and the sea
+of revolution upon which the second vial descended. The surrounding
+nations were the rivers and fountains upon which the third was
+poured. It is not said of them that they became as the blood of a
+dead man, nor that every living thing in them died, but only that
+"they became blood." This symbol denotes the insurrections and
+desolating wars in which the nations of Europe were involved for a
+number of years, growing out of the French Revolution. I shall not
+here take time nor space to enter into the historical details
+relating to this statement; the facts are well known. "The
+blood-thirsty Jacobinism of France waged war not only upon its own
+monarchy, but sought to overturn all the thrones and fabrics of
+despotism in Europe. The same system of infidelity and atheism had
+been spread through the kingdoms there, though not to so great an
+extent as in France, and prepared the elements for revolution in
+them likewise." The French republic encouraged these agitations and
+by a unanimous decree of the Assembly, in 1792, set itself in open
+hostility with all the established governments <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page317" name="page317"></a>[pg 317]</span> of
+Europe. It was in these words: "The National Convention declares in
+the name of the French nation, that it will grant fraternity and
+assistance to all people who wish to recover their liberty; and it
+charges the executive power to send the necessary orders to the
+generals, to give succor to such people, and to defend those
+citizens who have suffered, or may suffer in the cause of liberty."
+"The Revolution, having accomplished its work in France, having
+there destroyed royal despotism, ... now set itself about
+fulfilling its early promise of giving liberty to all peoples. In a
+word, the revolutionists became propagandists. France now exhibits
+what her historians call her social, her communicative genius."
+Napoleon was right when he said that a revolution in France was
+sure to be followed by a revolution throughout Europe. "France
+conceived the idea that she had a Divine mission, as the great
+apostle of liberty, to propagate republicanism through all the
+kingdoms of Europe. In her madness of intoxication she undertook
+the work, threw down the gauntlet, and the fierce tocsin of war
+sounded from nation to nation, until the continent was converted
+into one vast battle-field."</p>
+<p>The "angel of the waters" signifies the angel that had charge of
+the vial of wrath poured out upon the rivers and fountains of
+waters. In full view of the awful plagues sent upon the inhabitants
+of earth, one grand thought seemed to occupy his mind&mdash;the
+righteousness of these judgments. It is not such a thought as
+humanity would have in mind when reading the history of these
+fearful convulsions of society, one scene of terror only preparing
+the way for <span class="pagenum"><a id="page318" name=
+"page318"></a>[pg 318]</span> another more horrible, until they
+would feel like closing the book and asking, "When will this awful
+night of horror be over? When will these avenging judgments cease?"
+These, however, were not the thoughts of this angel clothed in
+spotless garments; for, draining his vial to the dregs and forcing
+the nations to drink it, he said: "Thou art righteous, O Lord,
+which art, and wast, and shalt be, because thou hast judged thus.
+For they have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and thou hast
+given them <i>blood to drink</i>; for they are worthy." Truly, in
+this the Word of God is fulfilled, which says, "My thoughts are not
+your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways." Isa. 55:8. That
+class of people who represent God as a kind, loving Father only,
+one who will not take vengeance upon the objects of his own
+creation&mdash;let them visit in the pages of history these nations
+of Europe, scathed and blasted with the hot thunderbolts of divine
+wrath, until their minds sicken with horror at the sight of human
+agony and blood. In full view of these horrifying scenes let them
+hear the angel of the waters saying, "Thou art righteous, O Lord
+... because thou hast judged thus; for they have shed the blood of
+saints and prophets, and thou hast given them blood to drink, for
+they are worthy"; while another voice from heaven, even from the
+altar, replies, "Even so, Lord God Almighty, <i>true and
+righteous</i> are thy judgments"&mdash;and their theology must here
+break down.</p>
+<p>The thoughts just expressed confirm with certainty our
+interpretation of the "sea" and "rivers and fountains of waters" as
+signifying those nations which had been the persecutors of the
+saints, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page319" name=
+"page319"></a>[pg 319]</span> show, also, the character of the
+divine judgments as being the shedding of their blood. They had
+shed the blood of saints and prophets, and now the same cup of
+wrath was placed to their lips, and they were forced to drink it to
+the dregs. God remembered the sighs and groans of his faithful
+followers; the cry of the martyrs for the avenging of their blood
+on "them that dwell on the earth" reached his ear; and now the time
+of retribution began.</p>
+<a name="chap16-8" id="chap16-8"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>8. And the fourth angel poured out his vial upon the sun; and
+power was given unto him to scorch men with fire.</p>
+<p>9. And men were scorched with great heat, and blasphemed the
+name of God, which hath power over these plagues: and they repented
+not to give him glory.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The sun is the great central luminary of the earth, under whose
+genial light and warmth everything rejoices and develops in forms
+of beauty. When, however, a scorching power is given to his rays,
+the earth becomes as a furnace in which every green thing is burnt
+up. What the sun is to this world, such are the ruling powers to a
+kingdom; and power being given them to scorch as with fire denotes
+that the government would be administered, not for the good of the
+people, but for the purpose of oppression. A scorching sun,
+therefore, is a proper symbol of tyrant rulers.</p>
+<p>Still keeping in view the object of God in sending these first
+plagues&mdash;the punishment of the nations embraced within the
+territory of the ten former kingdoms of Europe&mdash;we are
+directed with certainty to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page320"
+name="page320"></a>[pg 320]</span> the next great scourge that
+followed as a result of those already developed&mdash;the almost
+universal military empire of Napoleon. The success of three of the
+four greatest military leaders the world has ever
+seen&mdash;Alexander, C&aelig;sar, and Charlemagne&mdash;has been
+so clearly predicted by inspiration that no believer in the truth
+of Revelation attempts to deny it; therefore it is not surprising
+that the fourth&mdash;Napoleon&mdash;should also be assigned a
+place in Apocalyptic vision: not so much because of his
+all-powerful military genius merely, but because of his mighty
+influence and effects upon the very nations that were especially
+made the subject of prophecy, as they stand connected with the
+history of God's people for centuries. At the close of the
+Revolution the French nation had not virtue nor religion necessary
+to remedy the evils under which they had long been suffering from
+the oppression of their monarchs; for when they undertook the work
+and demolished the throne, they let loose all the wildest elements
+of wrath to rage without restraint. The nation rejected God, and
+God rejected the nation. He gave them up to their own madness, to
+the fury of the most atrocious wickedness that was ever developed
+under heaven. "From the wild excesses and intolerable calamities of
+blood-red republicanism, the people were rejoiced at length to find
+a refuge in a gigantic military despotism, which became the terror
+and scourge of Europe." But the hand of God was in this thing,
+also. When the sun scorches the earth with burning heat, it is God
+that gives it its power. So Napoleon with his iron will and
+towering genius was only an instrument in God's hand for scourging
+the guilty nations. In the ordinary <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page321" name="page321"></a>[pg 321]</span> sense of the term
+Napoleon was not a tyrant to his own nation. Still, his government
+was a despotism to France; while to the Apocalyptic earth, or the
+ten kingdoms, he was a scorching sun, for his empire extended over
+the whole. It finally became a saying that "if Napoleon's cocked
+hat and gray coat should be raised on the cliffs of Boulogne, all
+Europe would run to arms." This agrees with the statement of the
+historian Judson, concerning the monarchs of Europe, that "the mere
+name of Napoleon was a dread to them." None of them could stand
+before his terrible onset. "Europe was shaken from end to end by
+such armies as the world had not seen since the days of Xerxes.
+Napoleon, whose hands were upheld by a score of distinguished
+marshals, performed the miracles of genius. His brilliant
+achievements still dazzle, while they amaze, the world." The crowns
+and scepters of Europe he held as play-things in his hand, to
+dispose of at pleasure. Says Wickes: "Never in the history of
+Christendom were ancient dynasties overthrown, and new ones
+created, kings made and unmade, within so short a period, as during
+the unparallelled career of this great conqueror. He had the crowns
+and kingdoms of all Europe in his gift, to settle as he pleased, or
+bestow as presents upon his relatives and friends. To his brother
+Jerome he gave the crown of Westphalia; to his brother Louis, the
+crown of Holland; to his brother Joseph, the kingdom of Spain; to
+his brother-in-law and general Murat, the kingdom of Naples; and
+others he conferred upon his favorite marshals."</p>
+<p>When he invaded Russia, a territory outside of the Apocalyptic
+earth, he exceeded his mission, and there <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page322" name="page322"></a>[pg 322]</span> met
+with the most terrible overthrow. Although he entered that kingdom
+with the most magnificent army that he had ever gathered together,
+yet for suffering and disaster that famous retreat from burning
+Moscow stands without a parallel in history. It was not the Russian
+armies that prevailed against him; it was God that fought against
+him with the blasts of his north wind. These speedily silenced
+those tremendous parks of artillery that had thundered upon the
+fields of Jena, Friedland, Wagram, Marengo and Austerlitz, and
+scattered those invincible battalions that had marched triumphant
+over Europe. Ney, at the head of the National Guards, ever before
+victorious, was compelled to beat a hasty retreat, glad to escape
+with the smallest remnant of his host. Napoleon failed here because
+God had given him no mission to perform in that territory.</p>
+<p>Concerning his ambition, the Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica says:
+"With a frame of iron, Napoleon could endure any hardships; and in
+war, in artillery especially and engineering, he stands unrivalled
+in the world's history.... He could not rest, and knew not when he
+had achieved success.... He succeeded in alienating the peoples of
+Europe, in whose behalf he pretended to be acting. And when they
+learned by bitter experience that he had absolutely no love for
+liberty, and encouraged equality only so long as it was an equality
+of subjects under his rule, they soon began to war against what was
+in fact a world-destroying military despotism." He was inspired
+with the most unbounded ambition, which was nothing short of
+despotism over all Europe, if not the world. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page323" name="page323"></a>[pg 323]</span>
+Universal empire was his grand object, or, as it has been expressed
+by historians, a desire to concentrate "the world in
+Europe&mdash;Europe in France&mdash;France in Paris&mdash;Paris in
+<i>himself</i>." Says Wickes: "The empire which he actually reared
+in Europe was a vast, oppressive, centralized despotism.... To
+build it up, he desolated France through his terrible
+conscriptions, requiring the whole strength and flower of the
+nation to supply his armies. It is stated that after the wars of
+Napoleon there were three times the number of women in France that
+there were of men. The fathers, the husbands, the sons, the
+brothers, had fallen upon the battle-field, and thus desolated
+almost every household in the kingdom. Similar desolation also he
+carried by his wars into the other kingdoms."</p>
+<p>The dread of Napoleon settled down upon all the nations of
+Europe. They could not cope with his mighty genius, and therefore
+his presence was a terror to them. When the allied powers secured
+his first abdication, in 1814, and sent him to the island of Elba,
+the desolating results of his long career were shown in the work
+that the Congress of Vienna was called upon to perform when it
+assembled in the fall of 1814. While the representatives of the
+powers were laboring to repair the damage that had been wrought and
+to adjust the territorial limitations of the various nations that
+had been altered or entirely demolished, the assemblage was
+suddenly surprised the following spring by the news that Napoleon
+had escaped from Elba and was enroute to Paris. The terror and
+consternation in Europe then experienced is shown by the following
+quotation from Sir James Mackintosh, a <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page324" name="page324"></a>[pg 324]</span> man of high reputation
+as a jurist, as a historian, and as a far-sighted and candid
+statesman:</p>
+<p>"Was it in the power of language to describe the evil! Wars
+which had raged for more than twenty years throughout Europe, which
+had spread blood and desolation from Cadiz to Moscow, and from
+Naples to Copenhagen; which had wasted the means of human
+enjoyment, and destroyed the instruments of social improvement;
+which threatened to diffuse among the European nations the
+dissolute and ferocious habits of a predatory soldiery ... had been
+brought to a close.... Europe seemed to breathe after her
+sufferings. In the midst of this fair prospect and of these
+consolatory hopes, Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from Elba; three
+small vessels reached the coast of Provence; their hopes are
+instantly dispelled; the work of our toil and fortitude is undone:
+the blood of Europe is spilled in vain."</p>
+<p>The bitterest ingredients in the cup of these nations was the
+humiliating overthrow of their own government and their subjection
+to the hated <i>republican</i> despotism of France. It was a
+scorching sun that they could not endure. Still, they repented not
+to give God glory; they continued as before. After Napoleon had
+accomplished the purpose for which he was intended, God permitted
+this stupendous genius to be subdued; but it required the combined
+powers of Europe to secure his downfall.</p>
+<p>Creasy, in his Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World, says
+concerning the battle of Waterloo, "The great battle which ended
+the twenty-three years' war of the first French revolution, and
+which quelled the man whose genius and ambition had so long
+<i>disturbed and desolated the world</i>, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page325" name="page325"></a>[pg 325]</span>
+deserves to be regarded by us ... with peculiar gratitude for the
+repose which it secured for us and for the greater part of the
+human race."</p>
+<a name="chap16-10" id="chap16-10"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>10. And the fifth angel poured out his vial upon the seat of the
+beast; and his kingdom was full of darkness; and they gnawed their
+tongues for pain,</p>
+<p>11. And blasphemed the God of heaven because of their pains and
+their sores, and repented not of their deeds.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Under this vial the symbols differ somewhat. The "beast" is
+evidently the one of whom the image was made, referred to in verse
+2&mdash;the Papacy. The seat that the Papacy occupied from the time
+the dragon resigned in favor of the beast (chap. <a href=
+"#chap13-2">13:2</a>) was his position of temporal power and
+authority. In the following chapter the Papacy is described as
+<i>seated</i> upon a ten-horned beast, the ten horns of which
+symbolized the kingdoms of Europe. In this position it was able to
+exercise a guiding influence over the European nations. We have
+already seen what great power the Popes exercised in this direction
+during the Dark Ages. But the "beast" of <a href="#chap17">chapter
+17</a> himself, as distinguished from his horns, symbolizes the
+Holy Roman Empire, which was a revival of the old empire of the
+C&aelig;sars. This revived "world-empire" was closely allied to the
+Papacy. When Charlemagne, the Carlovingian king, restored the
+empire of the West, he was crowned "Emperor of the Romans" by Pope
+Leo III., A.D. 800. "The Popes made the descendants of Charles
+Martel kings and emperors; the grateful Frankish princes defended
+the Popes <span class="pagenum"><a id="page326" name=
+"page326"></a>[pg 326]</span> against all their enemies, imperial
+and barbarian, and dowering them with cities and provinces, laid
+the basis of their temporal sovereignty, which continued for more
+than a thousand years." After the decline of the Carlovingian power
+the imperial authority was again revived by Otto the Great (962),
+who was crowned Emperor of the Romans by the Pope. Henceforth the
+empire of the West was termed the <i>Holy Roman Empire</i>. "From
+this time on it was the rule that the German king who was crowned
+at Aachen had a right to be crowned ... emperor at Rome." So the
+general rule was that the Popes upheld the emperors, and the
+emperors sustained the Popes in their position as the spiritual
+heads of the church and as temporal rulers over the Papal states,
+which were granted them originally by the donations of Pepin and
+Charlemagne.</p>
+<p>In <a href="#chap13">chapter 13</a> the civil powers of Europe
+and the ecclesiastical power of Rome are not shown by a double
+symbol&mdash;a woman and a beast&mdash;as in <a href=
+"#chap17">chapter 17</a>, but are there represented by a
+combination of symbols drawn from the departments of human life and
+animal life, which shows that a politico-religious system is
+intended, as heretofore explained; hence the term <i>beast</i>, as
+there used, signifies either the Papacy or the civil power. Thus
+the term is used in the present chapter under consideration, and
+has reference here to the beast as an ecclesiastical
+power&mdash;the Papacy&mdash;and his "seat" refers to his temporal
+authority.</p>
+<p>This vial, then, being poured out upon his seat, with the result
+that his kingdom was filled with darkness&mdash;a symbol drawn from
+nature&mdash;points to the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page327"
+name="page327"></a>[pg 327]</span> downfall of the Pope as a
+temporal ruler. Thus he would be deprived of his "seat."</p>
+<p>We have already seen that each plague prepares the way for a
+succeeding one. Under the reign of Napoleon the Holy Roman Empire
+was dissolved (1806). This was the beginning of the end of the
+Pope's temporal authority; for the two had in a great measure been
+for ages interdependent upon each other. Pius VII. was made a
+prisoner and the temporal sovereignty of the Roman See declared to
+be at an end; while the Pope himself was forced to disown all claim
+to rank as a temporal ruler. Of course, this was but a temporary
+overthrow; for when the period of Reaction came, the Pope recovered
+also temporal authority. But the vast territories of Avignon,
+Venaissin, Bologna, Ferrara, and the Romagna&mdash;representing
+fully <i>a third</i> of all the Papal dominions&mdash;which had
+been forcibly ceded to France under Napoleon, was never restored to
+the Roman See. From that time the sun of the Pope's temporal
+kingdom rapidly approached the horizon; while the inhabitants of
+his dominions continued to blaspheme God through the atheistical
+Jacobinism that infested to so great an extent the whole mass of
+society&mdash;symbolized by their "sores"&mdash;and the firm
+supporters of Popery were filled with excessive chagrin and
+mortification of mind&mdash;symbolized by their
+"pains"&mdash;because the power of their leader, who professed
+temporal sovereignty over the whole earth, was being suddenly
+destroyed and his kingdom left in darkness. Concerning this matter
+the People's Cyclop&aelig;dia, after speaking of the blow the
+Pope's spiritual supremacy received at the Reformation, says: "But
+in her relations to the State <span class="pagenum"><a id="page328"
+name="page328"></a>[pg 328]</span> the Roman church has since
+passed through <i>a long and critical struggle</i>. The new
+theories <i>to which the French Revolution gave currency</i> have
+still further modified these relations." In the second revolution
+of 1848 the Pope's temporal authority was about to be entirely
+destroyed by the attempted establishment of the republic of Italy;
+but at this juncture France, who, notwithstanding her plagues, had
+not repented of her former deeds, not willing to desert entirely
+the Papal cause after upholding it faithfully for centuries,
+interfered, and the Pope was sustained in his position by a French
+garrison until 1870 (except a short time in 1867), at which time
+the success of King Victor Emmanuel and his capture of the Eternal
+City established the free government of United Italy. The temporal
+sun of the Pope set forever; his kingdom was left in darkness.</p>
+<a name="chap16-12" id="chap16-12"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>12. And the sixth angel poured out his vial upon the great river
+Euphrates; and the water thereof was dried up, that the way of the
+kings of the east might be prepared.</p>
+<a name="chap16-13" id="chap16-13"></a>
+<p>13. And I saw three unclean spirits like frogs come out of the
+mouth of the dragon, and out of the mouth of the beast, and out of
+the mouth of the false prophet.</p>
+<a name="chap16-14" id="chap16-14"></a>
+<p>14. For they are the spirits of devils, working miracles, which
+go forth unto the kings of the earth and of the whole world, to
+gather them to the battle of that great day of God Almighty.</p>
+<p>15. Behold, I come as a thief. Blessed is he that watcheth, and
+keepeth his garments, lest he walk naked, and they see his
+shame.</p>
+<p>16. And he gathered them together into a place called in the
+Hebrew tongue Armageddon.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page329" name="page329"></a>[pg
+329]</span>
+<p>The symbols under this vial are so different that at first they
+scarcely look like anything constituting a plague. By recalling a
+few circumstances of history we shall understand why the river
+Euphrates was selected as a symbol, and also, its true
+signification in this connection. This river was connected with
+ancient Babylon, and while running in its own channel was the
+protection of the city and an obstacle to its capture. By turning
+the water of this river from its course, King Cyrus (according to
+the account given by Herodotus) succeeded in overthrowing the city,
+with the result that God's people who were at that time in
+captivity there received permission to return to their own land and
+to rebuild the house of God in Jerusalem. Ezra 1:1-3. Under the
+sixth trumpet this symbol was applied to the four angels as a
+symbol of the restraint placed upon their operations, they being
+bound in that river. As there are no agents in this vision who are
+represented as bound, we must apply it to the city itself, the name
+of which is given in verse 19&mdash;Babylon&mdash;being a symbol of
+one of its defenses. According to verse 19 this mystical Babylon is
+composed of three parts, being made up of the dragon (in his modern
+form), the beast, and the false prophet mentioned in verse 13. And
+its location is not confined to the territory of the ten kingdoms;
+for its field of operations is not only that of the
+"earth"&mdash;the Apocalyptic earth&mdash;but "<i>of the whole
+world</i>." Ver. 14. In one division of this great city, that of
+the false prophet, God's people were long held in captivity; but
+its spiritual overthrow was to be accomplished by the drying up of
+the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page330" name="page330"></a>[pg
+330]</span> Euphrates of its defenses, that the way of the kings of
+the East might be prepared.<a id="footnotetag12" name=
+"footnotetag12"></a><a href="#footnote12"><sup>12</sup></a></p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote12" name=
+"footnote12"></a><b>Footnote 12:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag12">(return)</a>
+<p>Applying the Euphrates (an object from nature) as a symbol of
+ecclesiastical affairs in this manner appears to be in violation of
+the laws of symbolic language laid down; but we should bear in mind
+the fact that events of whatever nature connected with the history
+of God's chosen people in the old dispensation are of themselves
+proper symbols of similar events in the New Testament dispensation.
+Thus the temple, altar, candle-sticks, incense, holy city, etc., of
+the former dispensation, although of themselves objects from
+nature, are nevertheless clearly used to represent affairs of the
+church, because of their former significance as connected with the
+people of God. The fact that the great city of this chapter is
+spiritual Babylon (see verse 19) is positive proof that the river
+Euphrates is here applied in the proper manner.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>To the Hebrews the term <i>east</i> had a much more extensive
+signification than with us, to whom its only distinction is that it
+is the point of the sun's rising. But beyond this, it was to the
+Jews the cardinal point of the compass to which they naturally
+looked first. Their temple was built toward the east, its principal
+entrance being in that direction. The most powerful and enlightened
+kingdoms of the world lay to the east of Judea, and they included
+them all under the general term, sons or children of the East
+(Orientals) and kings of the East, comprehending not only Arabia
+and the lands of Moab and Ammon, but also Armenia, Assyria,
+Mesopotamia, Babylonia and Chaldea. Travelers from these countries
+would all enter Judea from the east, and they were considered
+Orientals. These nations were also distinguished for their
+proficiency in science and learning. The Magi, or wise men of the
+East, came to worship the infant Jesus at Jerusalem. They were
+eminent in the science of astrology, which was considered the
+greatest science of that day. The East, therefore, was looked to
+for <span class="pagenum"><a id="page331" name="page331"></a>[pg
+331]</span> wise men; and it is a noticeable fact that the pathway
+of science, of literature, and of empire has ever been from that
+direction, so as to have passed into a proverb, "westward the star
+of empire holds its way." "The kings of the East," then, employed
+as a symbol of this sixth vial, is not intended to signify any
+persons literally from that quarter of the earth, but represents
+the bringing in of knowledge and understanding. Thank God that we
+live in the time when the defenses of spiritual Babylon have been
+broken through and when light and knowledge on the Word of God has
+reached the hearts of many redeemed souls held in bondage there!
+And like the Israelites of old, when Cyrus, entered the ancient
+Babylon through the dry river-bed of the Euphrates, they have come
+out with rejoicing and made their way to Zion again. Halleluiah!
+That the spiritual downfall of Babylon is a real plague to
+sectarians there can be no doubt, and it is plainly declared to be
+such in chap. 18:8, where the same event is described.</p>
+<p>At the very time when the defenses of Babylon are thrown down,
+the three unclean spirits like frogs come out of the mouth of the
+dragon (Paganism), and out of the mouth of the beast (Romanism),
+and out of the mouth of the false prophet (Protestantism), to
+gather together all the wicked powers throughout "the whole world"
+for that last great day of God Almighty.<a id="footnotetag13" name=
+"footnotetag13"></a><a href="#footnote13"><sup>13</sup></a> There
+is no analagous object to which a <i>spirit</i> can be <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page332" name="page332"></a>[pg 332]</span> made a
+symbol; therefore we must regard them as being literally spirits of
+devils, here appearing under their own appropriate title. Their
+mission is to form a confederation of all the gigantic powers of
+wickedness, slimy and loathsome as the animal to which they are
+likened, and to array themselves against the cause of Christ.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote13" name=
+"footnote13"></a><b>Footnote 13:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag13">(return)</a>
+<p>I do not suppose that these three unclean spirits should be
+limited in their operations to Paganism, Romanism, and
+Protestantism; for that leaves out Mohammedanism, which is neither
+Pagan, Roman, nor Protestant, yet is certainly "false prophecy";
+and the three spirits were to gather the "whole world."</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Armageddon, where the spirits gathered all the enemies of truth
+and righteousness together, means the mountain of Megiddo, the
+memorable field of the overthrow of Sisera's mighty host by Barak.
+It was also the place of great defeat to the Israelites in the time
+of Josiah and the scene of his death. The name, therefore, stands
+as a symbol for a field of slaughter or defeat and denotes that
+when the confederation of wickedness is complete, the united host
+of God's enemies will be utterly defeated, as by the overthrow of
+Megiddo. This great conflict with powers of wickedness and spirits
+infernal will be further explained in <a href="#chap20">chapter
+XX</a>.</p>
+<p>Simultaneous with the notable events of this vial, the
+announcement is made of the near-coming of Christ to the
+world&mdash;"Behold I come as a thief. Blessed is he that watcheth,
+and keepeth his garments, lest he walk naked, and they see his
+shame." The children of God that have been gathered out of old
+Babylon rejoice in the glad announcement and say, "Even so come,
+Lord Jesus."</p>
+<a name="chap16-17" id="chap16-17"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>17. And the seventh angel poured out his vial into the air; and
+there came a great voice out of the temple of heaven, from the
+throne, saying, It is done.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page333" name="page333"></a>[pg
+333]</span>
+<p>18. And there were voices, and thunders, and lightnings; and
+there was a great earthquake, such as was not since men were upon
+the earth, so mighty an earthquake, and so great.</p>
+<p>19. And the great city was divided into three parts, and the
+cities of the nations fell: and great Babylon came in remembrance
+before God, to give unto her the cup of the wine of the fierceness
+of his wrath.</p>
+<p>20. And every island fled away, and the mountains were not
+found.</p>
+<p>21. And there fell upon men a great hail out of heaven, every
+stone about the weight of a talent: and men blasphemed God because
+of the plague of the hail; for the plague thereof was exceeding
+great.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The application of this vial to the judgments of the last great
+day is so plain that but little comment is here necessary. It was
+poured "into the air," a region of vast extent, not confined to a
+given locality, but embracing the whole earth. Hence this plague is
+universal. When the seventh angel emptied his vial, "There came a
+great voice out of the temple of heaven, from the throne, saying,
+It is done." All is now fulfilled. The work of wrath is finished.
+The description of the plague follows, but it follows only <i>as a
+description</i>. As actually accomplished, it preceded that great
+voice, which was uttered in view of the thing already brought to
+pass.</p>
+<p>The dissolution of the earth itself upon which we live is not
+here described, although according to the teaching of other
+scriptures it occurs at this time; but the symbols, being drawn
+from the department of the operations both of humanity and of
+nature, show the complete and final overthrow of all the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page334" name="page334"></a>[pg
+334]</span> great powers civil and ecclesiastical. The dominancy of
+these great powers has been the chief burden of Apocalyptic vision,
+and here their utter destruction at last is set forth under various
+symbols. The weight of the Jewish talent is said to have been one
+hundred and fourteen pounds. Such a mass of ice descending from
+heaven would beat down everything in its resistless, desolating
+fury. There is no intimation, however, of men being killed under
+this or the accompanying symbols; therefore as individuals they
+survive, while the storm of wrath falls upon the civil and
+ecclesiastical institutions of society, resulting in their utter
+annihilation. This is the "great day of his wrath" described under
+the sixth seal, to the symbols of which this description bears a
+striking resemblance, as any one can see at a glance. Well may the
+oppressors of earth say to the mountains and hills, "Fall on us,
+and hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the throne, and
+from the wrath of the Lamb: for the great day of his wrath is come;
+and who shall be able to stand?" Chap. <a href="#chap6-16">6:16,
+17</a>.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page335" name="page335"></a>[pg
+335]</span> <a name="chap17" id="chap17"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
+<a name="chap17-1" id="chap17-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And there came one of the seven angels which had the seven
+vials, and talked with me, saying unto me, Come hither; I will show
+unto thee the judgment of the great whore that sitteth upon many
+waters:</p>
+<p>2. With whom the kings of the earth have committed fornication,
+and the inhabitants of the earth have been made drunk with the wine
+of her fornication.</p>
+<p>3. So he carried me away in the spirit into the wilderness: and
+I saw a woman sit upon a scarlet colored beast, full of names of
+blasphemy, having seven heads and ten horns.</p>
+<p>4. And the woman was arrayed in purple and scarlet color, and
+decked with gold and precious stones and pearls, having a golden
+cup in her hand full of abominations and filthiness of her
+fornication:</p>
+<a name="chap17-5" id="chap17-5"></a>
+<p>5. And upon her forehead was a name written, MYSTERY, BABYLON
+THE GREAT, THE MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH.</p>
+<a name="chap17-6" id="chap17-6"></a>
+<p>6. And I saw the woman drunken with the blood of the saints, and
+with the blood of the martyrs of Jesus: and when I saw her, I
+wondered with great admiration.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Here again the narrative returns to take up another series of
+the history. A number of times we have been taken over the same
+ground. It is this feature of the Apocalypse more than any other
+that has misled and perplexed commentators. Attempting to explain
+it as one continuous narrative from beginning <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page336" name="page336"></a>[pg 336]</span> to
+end, they have been compelled to consider numerous passages as
+"digressions," "parentheses," or "episodes," etc. As already
+observed, however, the prophecy is not arranged after the ordinary
+plan of histories, narrating all the contemporaneous events in a
+given period, whether civil, religious, literary, scientific, or
+biographical, thus finishing up the history of that period; but it
+consists of a number of distinct themes running over the same
+ground.</p>
+<p>In this chapter a more particular description of the church of
+Rome, "that great city which reigneth over the kings of the earth"
+(verse 18), is given under the symbol of a drunken harlot. With
+this vile prostitute "the kings of the earth have committed
+fornication"&mdash;they have encouraged her in her corruption and
+idolatries&mdash;"and the inhabitants of the earth have been made
+drunk with the wine of her fornication." This latter symbol is
+doubtless taken from the cup of drugged wine with which lewd women
+were accustomed to inflame their lovers. So had this apostate
+church made "the inhabitants of the earth"&mdash;of the ten
+kingdoms&mdash;drunken with her wine-cup and thus rendered them
+willing partakers in her abominable idolatries. She is described in
+two positions&mdash;first, as "sitting upon many waters," which the
+angel informs us "are peoples, and multitudes, and nations, and
+tongues" (verse 15); and second, "upon a scarlet-colored beast,
+full of names of blasphemy, having seven heads and ten horns." The
+first position denotes her wide supremacy in the world over distant
+peoples and nations; the second, the close relationship that she
+sustained to the civil power. That beast carried her in royal
+state. The civil powers of Europe <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page337" name="page337"></a>[pg 337]</span> have usually lent
+themselves as a caparisoned hack for this great whore to ride upon
+and have considered themselves highly honored thereby. This beast
+was full of the names of blasphemy, which were the same as the
+blasphemous assumptions of the Papacy, as explained in <a href=
+"#chap13">chapter XIII</a>, showing that he agreed perfectly with
+this apostate church in her impious claims and supported her in
+them, making himself equally guilty and deserving of the same name.
+What is intended exactly by his scarlet color I do not know. The
+same power under its Pagan form was represented as a red
+dragon.</p>
+<p>The appearance of this woman was that of the most splendid
+character, nor are we to suppose the contrary because she was such
+an infamous prostitute. She may have been, and according to the
+description was, all that, but still her appearance was such as to
+bewitch her admirers and votaries. Robes of purple and scarlet,
+with the most costly profusion of gold and diamonds, were superb
+adorning, even regal splendor. All that skill and wealth could do
+in magnificence of attire was bestowed upon her to set forth her
+charms. The "golden cup in her hand" was as to richness in harmony
+with her dress, while as to contents it set forth her character,
+for it was "full of abominations and filthiness of her
+fornication." This cup was an appropriate symbol of her atrocious
+wickedness and idolatries.</p>
+<p>This woman had also a name written on her forehead. It was not,
+indeed, placed there by herself nor by her admirers; but He who
+drew this symbolic picture placed it there that all might know her
+true character. "MYSTERY, BABYLON THE GREAT, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page338" name="page338"></a>[pg 338]</span> THE
+MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH." Although this
+apostate church was only in embryo in the apostles' day, yet the
+apostle who gave us a careful delineation of its terrible
+characteristics declared that it was then developing and
+denominated it a <i>mystery</i>. "The mystery of iniquity doth
+already work." 2 Thes. 2:7. The same apostle regarded as an
+unquestionable fact that <i>godliness</i> was a mystery (1 Tim.
+3:16); but he who peruses the history of the Papacy will be forced
+to declare with emphasis, "Without controversy great is the mystery
+of Romanism." She is also styled Babylon the Great. This name is
+derived from ancient Babylon. This city was the center of the
+earth's idolatry and stood first of all as the direct enemy of
+God's people. So, likewise, this church is the center of earth's
+spiritual idolatry. There are other harlots, or corrupt churches,
+in the world beside her; but she is the <i>mother</i> of them all.
+They are all children by her side. Some of them greatly honor her
+and in deep veneration call her "<i>our holy mother church</i>;"
+but God brands her as the "mother of harlots and abominations of
+the earth."</p>
+<p>But the statement that she was a harlot merely, does not
+entirely describe her character. She was a <i>drunken</i> harlot.
+Drunken with what&mdash;wine? No indeed; that were a very small sin
+for her. She was "drunken with the blood of the saints, and with
+the blood of the martyrs of Jesus." Romanists positively declare
+that their church never persecutes; but with the picture of this
+drunken prostitute before our eyes, we shall be hard to convince.
+To illustrate this point fully would be to write a book of martyrs
+much <span class="pagenum"><a id="page339" name="page339"></a>[pg
+339]</span> larger than the present work; so, for lack of space
+only, we shall have to content ourselves with merely bringing
+forward a few of many historical proofs showing <i>that they
+themselves</i> claim the right to exterminate heretics.</p>
+<p>Innumerable provincial and national councils have issued the
+most cruel and bloody laws for the extermination of the Waldenses
+and other so-called heretics; such as the Councils of Oxford,
+Toledo, Avignon, Tours, Lavaur, Albi, Narbonne, Beziers, Tolosa,
+etc. Since Papists will assert that these had no authority to
+establish a doctrine of the church (although they clearly reflect
+its spirit), I remind the reader that some of their <i>General</i>
+Councils have by their decrees pronounced the punishment of death
+for heresy. At least six of these highest judicial assemblies of
+the Romish church, with the Pope at their head, have
+authoritatively enjoined the persecution and extermination of
+heretics. Extracts from the Acts of these Councils could be given
+if space permitted. 1. The second General Council of Lateran
+(1139), in its twenty-third canon. 2. The third General Council of
+Lateran (1179), under Pope Alexander III. 3. The fourth General
+Council of Lateran (1215), under the inhuman Pope Innocent III.,
+which exceeded in ferocity all similar decrees that had preceded
+it. 4. The sixteenth General Council, held at Constance in 1414.
+This Council, with Pope Martin present in person, condemned the
+reformers Huss and Jerome to be burned at the stake and then
+prevailed on the emperor Sigismund to violate the safe-conduct that
+he had given Huss, signed by his own hand, in which he guaranteed
+the reformer a safe return to Bohemia; <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page340" name="page340"></a>[pg 340]</span> and the inhuman
+sentence was carried out, with the haughty prelates standing by to
+satiate their eyes on the sight of human agony. This council also
+condemned the writings of Wickliffe and <i>ordered his bones to be
+dug up and burnt</i>, which savage sentence was afterwards carried
+into effect; and after lying in their grave for forty years, the
+remains of this first translator of the English Bible were reduced
+to ashes and thrown into the brook Swift. Well has the historian
+Fuller said, in reference to this subject, "The brook Swift did
+convey his ashes into Avon, the Avon into Severn, the Severn into
+the narrow seas, and they into the main ocean. And thus the ashes
+of Wickliffe are the emblem of his doctrie, which is now dispersed
+all over the world." 5. The Council of Sienna (1423), which was
+afterwards continued at Basil. 6. The fifth General Council of the
+Lateran (1514). The laws enacted in each succeeding Council were
+generally marked, if possible, with augmented barbarity.</p>
+<p>Says the learned Edgar, in his Variations of Popery: "The
+principle of persecution, being sanctioned not only by theologians,
+Popes and provincial synods but also by General Councils, <i>is a
+necessary and integral part of Romanism</i>. The Romish communion
+has, by its representatives, declared its right to compel men to
+renounce heterodoxy and embrace Catholicism, and to consign the
+obstinate to the civil power to be banished, tortured, or killed."
+St. Aquinas, whom Romanists call the "angelic Doctor," says,
+"Heretics are to be compelled by corporeal punishments, that they
+may adhere to the faith." Again, "Heretics may not only be
+excommunicated, but <i>justly killed</i>." He says that "the church
+consigns such to the secular <span class="pagenum"><a id="page341"
+name="page341"></a>[pg 341]</span> judges <i>to be exterminated
+from the world by death</i>."</p>
+<p>Cardinal Bellarmine is the great champion of Romanism and
+expounder of its doctrines. He was the nephew of Pope Marcellus,
+and he is acknowledged to be a standard writer with Romanists. In
+the twenty-first and twenty-second chapters of the third book of
+his work entitled <i>De Laicis</i>, he enters into a regular
+argument to prove that the church has the right, and should
+exercise it, of punishing heretics with death. The heading is his,
+together with what follows.</p>
+<p>"Chapter XXI. <i>That heretics, condemned by the church, may be
+punished with temporal penalties and even death.</i> We will
+briefly show that the church has the <i>power and ought</i> to cast
+off incorrigible heretics, especially those who have elapsed, and
+that the secular power ought to inflict on such temporal
+punishments and even death itself. 1. This may be proved from the
+Scripture. 2. It is proved from the opinions and laws of the
+emperors, <i>which the church has always approved</i>. 3. <i>It is
+proved by the laws of the church ... experience proves that there
+is no other remedy;</i> for the church has tried step by step all
+remedies&mdash;first excommunication alone; then pecuniary
+penalties; afterward banishment; <i>and lastly has been forced to
+put them to death; to send them to their own place</i>.... There
+are three grounds on which reason shows that heretics should be put
+to death: the first is, Lest the wicked should injure the
+righteous; second, That by the punishment of a few many may be
+reformed. For many who were made torpid by impunity, are <i>roused
+by the fear of punishment</i>; AND THIS WE <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page342" name="page342"></a>[pg 342]</span> DAILY
+SEE IS THE RESULT WHERE THE INQUISITION FLOURISHES," etc.</p>
+<p>"Chapter XXII. <i>Objections answered.</i> It remains to answer
+the objections of Luther and other heretics. Argument 1. From the
+history of the church at large. 'The church,' says Luther, 'from
+the beginning even to this time, <i>has never burned a heretic</i>.
+Therefore it does not seem to be the mind of the Holy Spirit that
+they should be burnt!' [He surely misunderstood Luther.] I reply
+that this argument proves not the sentiment, but the ignorance, or
+impudence of Luther; FOR AS ALMOST AN INFINITE NUMBER WERE EITHER
+BURNED OR OTHERWISE PUT TO DEATH, Luther either did not know it,
+and was therefore ignorant; or if he knew it, he is convicted of
+impudence and falsehood,&mdash;for <i>that heretics were often
+burnt</i> BY THE CHURCH may be proved by adducing a few from many
+examples. Argument 2. 'Experience shows that terror is not useful.'
+I reply EXPERIENCE PROVES THE CONTRARY&mdash;for the Donatists,
+Manicheans, and Albigenses WERE ROUTED AND ANNIHILATED BY ARMS,"
+etc.</p>
+<p>So this high dignitary of the Catholic church, a cardinal, a
+nephew of one Pope and the special favorite of others, freely
+admits the charge so often laid to Popery by creditable
+historians&mdash;the butchering of an "infinite number" of people
+that differed from them&mdash;and here labors hard to uphold it as
+a principle of righteousness. Their bloody crusades against the
+innocent, unoffending Waldenses, Albigenses, and other peoples, in
+which thousands, and in the aggregate <i>millions</i>, were
+slaughtered like venomous reptiles, stand out on the page of
+history with a prominence that can <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page343" name="page343"></a>[pg 343]</span> not be mistaken; and
+they themselves can not deny it. Dowling has well said that their
+"history is written in lines of blood. Compared with the butcheries
+of holy men and women by the Papal Antichrist, the persecutions of
+the Pagan emperors of the first three centuries sink into
+comparative insignificance. For not a tithe of the blood of martyrs
+was shed by Paganism, that has been poured forth by Popery; and the
+persecutors of Pagan Rome never dreamed of the thousand ingenious
+contrivances of torture which the malignity of Popish inquisitors
+succeeded in inventing." P. 541.</p>
+<p>If any of my readers suppose that the character of Popery has
+changed with the lapse of ages, I must tell you that such is not
+the ease. Popery is unchangeable and this her ablest advocates
+declare. Chas. Butler, in the work he wrote in reply to Southey's
+book of the church, says, "It is most true that the Roman Catholics
+believe the doctrines of their church to be unchangeable; and that
+it is a tenet of their creed, that what their faith ever has been,
+such it was from the beginning, <i>such it is now</i>, and SUCH IT
+EVER WILL BE." A copy of the eleventh edition of The Faith of Our
+Fathers, published in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1883, lies before me.
+It was written by Archbishop (now Cardinal) James Gibbons, the
+highest authority of the Roman Catholic church in this country. In
+page 95 he says: "It is a marvelous fact, worthy of record, that in
+the whole history of the church, from the nineteenth century to the
+first, no solitary example can be adduced to show that any Pope or
+General Council ever revoked a decree of faith or morals enacted by
+any preceding pontiff or <span class="pagenum"><a id="page344"
+name="page344"></a>[pg 344]</span> council. Her record in the past
+ought to be a sufficient warrant that she will <i>tolerate no
+doctrinal variations in the future</i>." So the doctrine of her
+inherent right to persecute and slay every one who disagrees with
+her, which has been enacted by Pontiffs and General Councils and so
+carried out in the past, is still in vogue and would now be
+enforced were it in her power to do so.</p>
+<p>While this statement of Gibbons' shows the unchangeable spirit
+of Popery, still it is the basest presumption upon the historical
+knowledge of the reader. The facts are that the <i>official</i>
+acts of some of their Popes and General Councils have been so far
+wrong that Romanists themselves have been compelled to admit it.
+Thus the <i>sixth</i> General Council, which was held at
+Constantinople in 680, and which every Catholic accepts as
+Ecumenical, condemned, in the strongest terms, Pope Honorius as a
+Monothelite <i>heretic</i>. Let them attempt to deny it, and we
+will bring forward our proof. Romish authors themselves admit it,
+the well-known Dupin with the rest, as appears by the following
+extract from his writings: "The Council had as much reason to
+censure him as Sergius, Paulus, Peter, and the other Patriarchs
+o&pound; Constantinople." He adds in language yet more emphatic,
+"This will stand for certain, then, that Honorius <i>was
+condemned</i>, AND JUSTLY TOO, AS A HERETIC, by the sixth General
+Council." Dupin's Eccl. History, Vol. II, p. 16.</p>
+<p>The Decretals of Isodore furnish another example of Papal
+infallibility (?). For ages these documents were the chief
+instrument of the Popes in extending their power and the proof of
+the righteousness of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page345" name=
+"page345"></a>[pg 345]</span> their assumptions to excessive
+temporal authority. Wickliffe declared them false and apocryphal.
+For this he was condemned by the sixteenth <i>General Council</i>,
+held at Constance in 1414, and his bones ordered dug up and burnt
+because of his daring impudence. The spurious character of these
+false decretals have since been proved beyond the shadow of a
+doubt; and since it is impossible to deny it longer, it is admitted
+even by Romanists. So, after all, this <i>infallible</i> Council
+was wrong, the Papists themselves being the judges.</p>
+<p>Pope Benedict IX. was guilty of such flagitious crimes that he
+became an object of public abhorrence, and he finally <i>sold</i>
+the Popedom. One of his infallible (?) successors in the Papal
+chair, Pope Victor III., pronounced this infallible (?) profligate
+a person "abandoned to all manner of vice. A <i>successor of</i>
+SIMON THE SORCERER, and NOT OF SIMON THE APOSTLE." I do not
+question the truth of this assertion, but what becomes of their
+boasted uninterrupted apostolical succession? Baronius, the Popish
+annalist, confesses that Pope Sergius III. was "the slave of every
+vice, and the most wicked of men." Among other horrid acts Platina
+relates that he <i>rescinded the acts</i> of Pope Formosus,
+compelled those whom he had ordained to be re-ordained, dragged his
+dead body from the sepulchre, beheaded him as though he were alive,
+and then threw him into the Tiber! This Pope cohabited with an
+infamous prostitute named Marozia and by her had a son named John,
+who afterwards ascended the Papal throne, through the influence of
+his licentious mother, under the name of John XI. So the unlawful
+amours of Sergius produced this infallible, necessary link in the
+<i>holy</i> chain <span class="pagenum"><a id="page346" name=
+"page346"></a>[pg 346]</span> of uninterrupted apostolical
+succession! It must be remembered, also, that the Popes have for
+ages laid claim themselves to infallibility; and in the last
+General Council of that body, held at the Vatican in 1870, it was
+declared a dogma of the church. Romanists will tell us that this
+decree refers only to his official acts, and not to his personal
+character; but official acts have been the main thing under
+consideration in the case of Sergius, Honorius, and Benedict. But
+if such monsters of vice can produce good, holy, infallible acts,
+as Papists declare, then Jesus Christ is mistaken; for he declared
+positively that "a corrupt tree <i>bringeth forth evil fruit</i>
+... neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit." Mat. 7:17,
+18. "God forbid: yea, let God be true, but every man a liar." Rom.
+3:4. During these dark ages thousands of priests, who were by the
+laws of the church denied their Scriptural right of possessing a
+wife (1 Cor. 7:9, etc.), lived openly with concubines; and the
+Council of Toledo decreed that they should not be condemned
+therefor, provided they were content with one.</p>
+<p>But the devil produced his master-piece of iniquity in the
+person of Roderic Borgia, who ascended the Papal throne in 1492
+under the name of Alexander VI. The utmost limits assigned to Papal
+depravity were realized in him, so that the very name Borgia has
+come to be used as a designation of any person unusually wicked.
+Says Waddington: "The ecclesiastical records of fifteen centuries
+... contain no name so loathsome, no crimes so foul as his.... Not
+one among the many zealous annalists of the Roman church has
+breathed a whisper in his praise.... He publicly cohabited with a
+Roman matron named <span class="pagenum"><a id="page347" name=
+"page347"></a>[pg 347]</span> Vanozia, by whom he had five
+acknowledged children. Neither in his manners nor in his language
+did he affect any regard for morality or decency; and one of the
+earliest acts of his pontificate was, to celebrate, with scandalous
+magnificence, in his own palace, the marriage of his daughter
+Lucretia. On one occasion this prodigy of vice gave a splendid
+entertainment, within the walls of the Vatican, to no less than
+fifty public prostitutes at once, and that in the presence of his
+daughter Lucretia, at which entertainment deeds of darkness were
+done, over which decency must throw a veil; and yet this monster of
+vice was, according to Papist ... the vicar of God upon earth, and
+was addressed by the title of HIS HOLINESS!!" But why stir this
+cesspool of filth any longer? Is not that church of which Alexander
+VI. was for eleven years the crowned and anointed head&mdash;a
+necessary link in the boasted chain of <i>holy</i> apostolical
+succession, the pretended vicar of Christ upon earth&mdash;is it
+not, I ask, fitly described by the pen of inspiration "MOTHER OF
+HARLOTS AND ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH," as she reeled onward in the
+career of ages, "drunken with the blood of the saints"?</p>
+<a name="chap17-7" id="chap17-7"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>7. And the angel said unto me, Wherefore didst thou marvel? I
+will tell thee the mystery of the woman, and of the beast that
+carriest her, which hath the seven heads and ten horns.</p>
+<p>8. The beast that thou sawest was, and is not; and shall ascend
+out of the bottomless pit, and go into perdition: and they that
+dwell on the earth shall wonder, whose names were not written in
+the book of life from the foundation of the world, when they behold
+the beast that was, and is not, and yet is.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page348" name="page348"></a>[pg
+348]</span>
+<p>9. And here is the mind which hath wisdom. The seven heads are
+seven mountains, on which the woman sitteth.</p>
+<a name="chap17-10" id="chap17-10"></a>
+<p>10. And there are seven kings; five are fallen, and one is, and
+the other is not yet come; and when he cometh, he must continue a
+short space.</p>
+<p>11. And the beast that was, and is not, even he is the eighth,
+and is of the seven, and goeth into perdition.</p>
+<a name="chap17-12" id="chap17-12"></a>
+<p>12. And the ten horns which thou sawest are ten kings, which
+have received no kingdom as yet; but receive power as kings one
+hour with the beast.</p>
+<p>13. These have one mind, and shall give their power and strength
+unto the beast.</p>
+<p>14. These shall make war with the Lamb, and the Lamb shall
+overcome them: for he is Lord of lords, and King of kings: and they
+that are with him are called, and chosen, and faithful.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The angel promises to explain "the mystery of the woman and of
+the beast that carried her." The beast is the same as the secular
+beast with seven heads and ten horns, described in chapter 13. An
+explanation of its heads and horns has already been given. The
+expression "the seven heads are seven mountains, on which the woman
+sitteth, and there are seven kings," requires further explanation.
+Many have understood the mountains to signify the seven mountains
+on which the city of Rome is said to be built; but that is adopting
+the literal mode of interpretation, and is contrary to the laws of
+symbolic language. The more obvious meaning is that the seven heads
+represent seven mountains and also seven kings; but this probably
+is not the idea intended. The heads of a beast are not the proper
+symbol of mountains. The fact, too, that the woman is represented
+as sitting upon these mountains, <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page349" name="page349"></a>[pg 349]</span> shows that they are to
+be taken as a symbol, as well as the woman, and not the object
+symbolized. They are, then, the same as the heads and denote the
+seven kings or seven forms of government under which the Roman
+empire subsisted.</p>
+<p>The seventh and last head has not yet been identified. Before
+considering it, however, I wish to call attention to another point
+that has already been referred to. The beast that John here saw,
+with the seven heads and ten horns, was Rome under the Papal power.
+Did new Rome in reality have the seven heads? No. The dragon John
+saw in <a href="#chap12">chapter 12</a> is represented as having
+seven heads and ten horns, and signified Rome under the Pagan
+power. Did old Rome really possess the ten horns? No. According to
+verse 12 in this chapter, they were to arise future of John's time.
+But notice carefully that the seven heads, which according to this
+description, belonged to the beast sustaining the Papal power in
+after years, are here explained by the angel as signifying the very
+forms of government by which <i>Pagan</i> Rome subsisted. "Five
+<i>are fallen</i> [a past event], one <i>is</i> [exists at this
+present time], and the other <i>is not yet come</i>." So according
+to divine interpretation, the same heads and horns serve for both
+the dragon and the beast. This could not possibly be a true
+representation unless they were both in reality the <i>same
+beast</i>, they being represented as two only for the purpose of
+describing the two phases of Roman history&mdash;Pagan and
+Papal.</p>
+<p>With this point established, that these two forms of Roman
+history are the same beast, we are now prepared to understand the
+statement that the beast "was and is not, and yet is." This is
+equivalent to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page350" name=
+"page350"></a>[pg 350]</span> saying that the beast existed, it
+ceased to exist, and then it came into existence again. This was
+exactly the history of Rome. Its downfall under the Pagan form was
+described under the fourth trumpet as an eclipse of the sun, moon
+and stars, so that they shone not for a third part of the day and
+night. For a time it seemed not to exist. A little later the
+eclipse is lifted; the beast exists again under the Papal form. In
+this is set forth clearly the wounding and the healing of the
+beast. The wound was inflicted on its sixth, or Imperial, head (for
+the first five had already fallen, according to the historical
+facts just related), being accomplished by the hordes of Northern
+barbarians overturning the empire of the West. It appeared for a
+time that the beast was indeed wounded unto death; but not so: to
+the surprise of all, he survived under the form of the seventh
+head. At this point the question is sure to be asked, How could the
+beast continue to live if its seventh head was to continue but "a
+short space"? This is accounted for by the fact that there was what
+might be appropriately called an eighth head, but which was in
+reality of the seven. "And the beast that was, and is not, even he
+is the eighth, and is of the seven." Verse 11.</p>
+<p>The identification of the seventh head will now make the matter
+complete. The facts all meet in the Carlovingian empire, or the
+empire of Charlemagne. In the year 774 Charlemagne completed the
+work begun by Pepin twenty years before and overthrew the kingdom
+of the Lombards in Italy, which was the last of the three horns
+plucked up before the little horn of Daniel. By this victory he
+became complete master of Italy, and he received the title
+Patrician of Rome. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page351" name=
+"page351"></a>[pg 351]</span> This was not merely an honorary
+title, such as had for ages been conferred upon certain
+individuals; but it was a distinct form of civil government and
+supreme, taking the same rank with that of the Consular, the
+Decemvirate, the Triumvirate, etc., in the earlier history of the
+nation. It lasted, however, only "a short space," or twenty-six
+years, when Charlemagne, having extended his conquests over all the
+western part of Europe, assumed the Imperial title and thus revived
+the empire of Rome in the West under its Gothic form. In his
+Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Gibbon says: "In the
+twenty-six years that elapsed between the conquest of Lombardy and
+his Imperial coronation, Rome, which had been delivered by the
+sword, was subject, as his own, to the scepter, of Charlemagne. The
+people swore allegiance to his person and family; in his name,
+money was coined, and justice was administered, and the election of
+Popes was examined and confirmed by his authority&mdash;except an
+original and self-inherent claim of sovereignity, there was not any
+prerogative remaining which the title of emperor could add to the
+Patrician of Rome." This decisive testimony by the highest
+authority on the subject shows conclusively that all the power of
+sovereignty resided in Charlemagne as the Patrician of Rome, and
+that this, therefore, is a proper head to be ranked with the other
+six that preceded it.<a id="footnotetag14" name=
+"footnotetag14"></a><a href="#footnote14"><sup>14</sup></a></p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote14" name=
+"footnote14"></a><b>Footnote 14:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag14">(return)</a>
+<p>Commentators frequently identify the seventh head with the
+Exarchate of Ravenna. After the overthrow of the kingdom of the
+Ostrogoths in Italy by Belisarius, the general of Justinian, about
+the middle of the sixth century, the territory became subject to
+the emperor of the Eastern empire and was ruled by him through an
+Exarch whose place of residence was Ravenna. This Exarchate
+(sometimes called <i>Patriciate</i>) continued until about the
+middle of the eighth century, when it was terminated by Astolphus,
+king of the Lombards, who made Ravenna the capital of the Lombardic
+kingdom in 752. Three years later the Lombards were defeated by
+Pepin, who made the Holy See a present of the lands he conquered
+from them&mdash;the origin of the temporal power of the Popes.
+Pepin was succeeded by his son Charlemagne, who was appointed
+<i>Patrician</i> of Rome, by the Pope, in 774. During the last half
+century that the Exarchate of Ravenna remained its existence was
+but little more than a name, the real power of government being
+usurped by the Papacy. It could hardly be considered an
+inconsistency were we to interpret the seventh head as signifying
+both the Patriciate of Ravenna and the Patriciate of Charlemagne
+that closely followed it; but in the present work I have restricted
+its application to the latter form because of its distinctive
+characteristic as constituting a supreme civil power entirely
+independent of the empire of the East, and because of its
+importance in the revival of the empire of the West.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page352" name="page352"></a>[pg
+352]</span>
+<p>This head, however, continued only "a short space"; and an
+eighth arose on Christmas, the first day of the year 800 (as time
+was then reckoned), when Charlemagne was crowned emperor of Rome,
+and thus revived the empire of the West. This eighth head, however,
+was "of the seven"; for it was the same as the sixth, both being
+Imperial&mdash;the first being in the Augustan line, and the other
+in the Carlovingian, and separated from each other by the seventh,
+or Patriciate. Considered one way, there were eight heads, but two
+of them were alike, hence only seven; for the eighth was of the
+seven. According to verse 11 it was under the eighth head that the
+beast subsisted at the time he was carrying the woman of this
+chapter, which exactly accords with the historical facts in the
+case; and the same was continued in a line of emperors reaching
+down to the time of the French Revolution.</p>
+<p>The ten horns had "received no kingdom as yet." This signifies
+that at the time when the Revelation <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page353" name="page353"></a>[pg 353]</span> was given they had not
+yet arisen. When they did come into existence they were to receive
+power as kings with the beast and were to give to it their power
+and strength. It is a singular fact that a distinct head should
+continue to exist after these horns had arisen and developed into
+powerful kingdoms; but herein the remarkable accuracy of prophecy
+is clearly shown. It is said that they should make war with the
+Lamb and that the Lamb should overcome them. Some think that this
+has reference to the persecution of the saints during the Dark
+Ages; but it seems to me that it would have been stated differently
+if such were its meaning. It may be a prophetical reference to the
+battle of Armageddon, which will be terminated by the coming of the
+Son of God himself to overthrow completely all the powers of
+wickedness.</p>
+<a name="chap17-15" id="chap17-15"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>15. And he saith unto me, The waters which thou sawest, where
+the whore sitteth, are peoples, and multitudes, and nations, and
+tongues.</p>
+<a name="chap17-16" id="chap17-16"></a>
+<p>16. And the ten horns which thou sawest upon the beast, these
+shall hate the whore, and shall make her desolate and naked, and
+shall eat her flesh, and burn her with fire.</p>
+<p>17. For God hath put in their hearts to fulfil his will, and to
+agree, and give their kingdom unto the beast, until the words of
+God shall be fulfilled.</p>
+<a name="chap17-18" id="chap17-18"></a>
+<p>18. And the woman which thou sawest is that great city, which
+reigneth over the kings of the earth.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The special thoughts contained in these verses have been so far
+explained already that it is unnecessary to go over the same ground
+again. Already the civil powers of Europe are beginning to cast
+this woman <span class="pagenum"><a id="page354" name=
+"page354"></a>[pg 354]</span> aside as an old, wrinkled, haggard
+prostitute is cast off by her lovers. Already they have deprived
+her of all temporal authority such as she possessed in guiding this
+beast of chapter 17, as explained under the fifth plague in the
+preceding chapter. Whether they are destined to become a still
+greater enemy to her, the future will determine.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page355" name="page355"></a>[pg
+355]</span> <a name="chap18" id="chap18"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
+<a name="chap18-1" id="chap18-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And after these things I saw another angel come down from
+heaven, having great power; and the earth was lightened with his
+glory.</p>
+<a name="chap18-2" id="chap18-2"></a>
+<p>2. And he cried mightily with a strong voice, saying, Babylon
+the great is fallen, is fallen, and is become the habitation of
+devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of every
+unclean and hateful bird.</p>
+<p>3. For all nations have drunk of the wine of the wrath of her
+fornication, and the kings of the earth have committed fornication
+with her, and the merchants of the earth are waxed rich through the
+abundance of her delicacies.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>A movement of mighty power is symbolized in these verses. The
+chronology of the events described in the preceding chapter brings
+us down to the time when the ten horns turn against the Papacy by
+depriving her of her temporal authority. This, as we have already
+seen, was completely fulfilled in 1870 and constituted the fifth
+plague. In the description of the sixth plague which followed, it
+was shown that the great city which was invaded was composed of
+three parts&mdash;Paganism (the modern form of the dragon power),
+Catholicism, and Protestantism. The same great city is here brought
+to view, and the angel from heaven, with a mighty voice, cries,
+"Babylon the Great is fallen, is fallen." This fall of Babylon can
+not signify a literal destruction; for there are certain events to
+take place in Babylon after her fall which entirely precludes that
+idea; for instance, the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page356" name=
+"page356"></a>[pg 356]</span> calling of God's people out of her,
+in order that they may not receive of her plagues. In these plagues
+is embraced her literal destruction, or complete overthrow. The
+fall is therefore a moral one; for the result of it is that Babylon
+becomes "the habitation of devils, and the hold of every foul
+spirit, and a cage of every unclean and hateful bird."</p>
+<p>Protestants who make any attempt to interpret these prophecies
+usually limit the designation "Babylon the Great" in these verses
+to the church of Rome, because the woman symbolizing the apostate
+church in the preceding chapter is denominated "Babylon the Great."
+Ver. 5. But the same verse also declares her to be the
+"<i>Mother</i> of harlots;" and if she as a degraded woman stands
+as the representative of a corrupt church, her unchaste daughters,
+also, must symbolize churches that are her descendants; and if the
+real name of the <i>mother</i> is Babylon, as stated, the proper
+name of her harlot daughters must be Babylon also. Whether,
+therefore, the mother or the daughters are referred to, it is all
+"Babylon the Great," because it is all the same family and is a
+part of that "GREAT CITY which reigneth over the kings of the
+earth." Chap. <a href="#chap17-18">17:18</a>. We must, therefore,
+have something besides the mere title "Babylon the Great" to
+determine which division of the great city is referred to in a
+given instance&mdash;whether Pagan, Papal, or Protestant.</p>
+<p>A careful study of the prophecy now under consideration will
+show that it has particular reference to the Protestant division of
+Babylon. It contained many of God's children; whereas Paganism was
+always a false religion and never held any of God's saints.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page357" name="page357"></a>[pg
+357]</span> Under the reign of Catholicism, the people of God are
+represented in all the symbols of this book relating thereto as
+existing entirely separate from that communion. The description of
+this apostate church given in the preceding chapter shows clearly
+that instead of being partly composed of God's saints, she was
+their most bitter and relentless persecutor, yea, was "<i>drunken
+with the blood of the saints</i>, and with the blood of the martyrs
+of Jesus." This is definite proof that the present phase of Babylon
+under consideration is the Protestant division; and her moral fall
+is the grand signal for the escape of God's people who have partly
+composed her number, as the fall of ancient Babylon was for the
+escape of the Israelites. In their younger days the Protestant
+organizations (symbolized by the daughters) were of much better
+character than the mother church from whom they descended. Many of
+them started out on reform. While a spiritual people, God worked
+with them; but when they made their image to the beast, they
+suddenly declined, and this voice from heaven finally declares them
+to be in a fallen condition&mdash;entirely void of salvation,
+except a very few chosen saints that have not defiled their
+garments, contained therein.</p>
+<p>That this application of the term <i>Babylon</i> is correct, and
+also, the fallen condition ascribed to her in accordance with the
+facts, I will prove by the following testimonies of Protestants
+themselves. The first is from Vision of the Ages; or, Lectures on
+the Apocalypse, by B.W. Johnson, member of the Christian sect.</p>
+<p>"It is needful to inquire what the term <i>Babylon</i> means. It
+occurs several times in the New Testament. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page358" name="page358"></a>[pg 358]</span> Here
+(in the Apocalypse) it is spoken of as 'that great city,' and her
+fall is doomed 'because she hath made all nations drunk with the
+wine of her fornication.' In Rev. 17:5, a scarlet harlot is seen
+sitting upon the seven-headed and ten-horned monster, and upon her
+forehead is written, 'Mystery, Babylon the Great.' With this woman
+the kings of the earth are said to have committed fornication. In
+chapter 18 the fall of the great city, Babylon is detailed at
+length, and it is again said that all the kings of the earth have
+committed fornication with her. The harlot with Babylon stamped on
+her brow, and the great city of fornication styled Babylon, in
+chapters 14 and 18, are one and the same existence.</p>
+<p>"There is an ancient city of Babylon often mentioned in the Old
+Testament, but ages before John wrote, it had ceased to be
+inhabited, the only dwellers among its lonely ruins were howling
+beasts and hissing serpents. It has never been rebuilt to this day
+and has passed away forever. John refers therefore not to old
+Babylon, but to some power yet unseen (when he was upon the earth),
+that should be revealed in due time, and of which old Babylon was a
+symbol. Let us notice some of the features of ancient Babylon.</p>
+<p>"1. On that site took place the confusion of tongues which
+divided those who before had been of one speech and one family,
+into various tribes and schisms at variance with each other and of
+various tongues. The word Babylon, a memorial of this event, means
+confusion, and is derived from Babel.</p>
+<p>"2. Old Babylon persecuted the people of God and destroyed the
+temple in Jerusalem.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page359" name="page359"></a>[pg
+359]</span>
+<p>"3. It carried the people of God into captivity.</p>
+<p>"4. It was a mighty, resistless universal empire. The antitype,
+the spiritual Babylon, must correspond. There is a power that
+exhibits all these characteristics. By apostasy from the truth it
+originated the schism which has divided the family of God into
+different sects and parties which speak a different spiritual
+language. It has carried the church into a long captivity by
+binding upon it the thralldom of superstition. It has been a
+constant persecutor of the saints, and has enjoyed an almost
+universal dominion. That power is the woman that sits upon the
+seven-headed beast ... the false woman, symbolical of a false
+church, the great apostate spiritual dominion of Rome. And we may
+add, out of which have come&mdash;directly or
+indirectly&mdash;<i>all the religious sects of the present
+day</i>."</p>
+<p>Dr. Barnes says: "The word <i>Babylon</i> became the emblem of
+all that was haughty and oppressive, and especially of all that
+persecuted the church of God. The word here (Rev. 18:4) must be
+used to denote some power that resembled the ancient and literal
+Babylon in these characteristics. The literal Babylon was no more;
+but the name might be used properly to denote a similar power."</p>
+<p>Wm. Kinkade, in Bible Doctrine, page 249, says, "I think Christ
+has a true church on earth, but its members are scattered among the
+various denominations, and are more or less under the influence of
+mystery Babylon and her daughters."</p>
+<p>Alexander Campbell says: "A reformation of Popery was attempted
+in Europe full three centuries ago. It ended in a Protestant
+hierarchy, and swarms <span class="pagenum"><a id="page360" name=
+"page360"></a>[pg 360]</span> of dissenters. Protestantism has been
+reformed into Presbyterianism, that into Congregationalism, and
+that into Baptistism, etc., etc. Methodism has attempted to reform
+all, but has reformed itself into many forms of Wesleyanism. All of
+them retain in their bosom&mdash;in their ecclesiastical
+organizations, worship, doctrines, and observances&mdash;various
+relics of Popery. They are at best a reformation of Popery, and
+only reformations in part. The doctrines and traditions of men yet
+impair the power and progress of the gospel in their hands." On
+Baptism, p.15.</p>
+<p>Again, he says: "The worshiping establishments now in operation
+throughout Christendom, increased and cemented by their respective
+voluminous confessions of faith, and their ecclesiastical
+constitutions, are not churches of Jesus Christ, but the legitimate
+daughters of that mother of harlots, the church of Rome." How any
+man could possess as much light on this subject as did Mr.
+Campbell, and then build a sect himself, is more than I can
+understand.</p>
+<p>Lorenzo Dow says of the Romish Church: "If she be the mother,
+who are the daughters? It must be the corrupt, national,
+established churches that came out of her." Dow's Life, p. 542.</p>
+<p>In the Religious Encyclopaedia, Article Antichrist, we read:
+"The writer of the book of Revelation tells us he heard a voice
+from heaven saying, 'Come out of her, my people, that ye partake
+not of her sins, and receive not of her plagues.' If such persons
+are to be found in the 'mother of harlots,' with much less
+hesitation may it be inferred that they are connected with her
+unchaste daughters, those national churches <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page361" name="page361"></a>[pg 361]</span> which
+are founded upon what are called Protestant principles."</p>
+<p>In the Encyclop&aelig;dia of Religious Knowledge we read: "An
+important question, however, says Mr. Jones, stills remains for
+inquiry: Is Antichrist confined to the church of Rome? The answer
+is readily returned in the affirmative by Protestants in general;
+and happy had it been for the world had that been the case. But
+although we are fully warranted to consider that church as 'the
+mother of harlots,' the truth is that by whatsoever arguments we
+succeed in fixing that odius charge upon her, we shall, by parity
+of reasoning, be obliged to allow other national churches to be her
+unchaste daughters, and for this plain reason, among others,
+because in their very constitution and tendency they are hostile to
+the nature of the kingdom of Christ."</p>
+<p>One of Martin Luther's guests remarked that the world might
+continue fifty years, and he replied: "Pray God that it may not
+exist so long; matters would be even worse than they have been.
+There would rise up infinite sects and schisms, which are at
+present hidden in men's hearts and nature. No; may the Lord come at
+once, for there is no amendment to be expected."</p>
+<p>Mr. Hartly, a learned churchman, has remarked as follows: "There
+are many prophecies which declare the fall of the ecclesiastical
+powers of the Christian world, and though each church seems to
+flatter itself with the hope of being exempted, yet it is very
+plain that the prophetical characters belong to all. They all have
+left the true, pure, simple religion, and teach for doctrines the
+commandments of men."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page362" name="page362"></a>[pg
+362]</span>
+<p>Says Mr. Simpson, in Plea for Religion: "We Protestants, too,
+read the declaration of the third angel against the worshipers of
+the beast and his image, and make ourselves easy under the awful
+denunciation by applying it exclusively to the church of Rome;
+never dreaming that they are equally applicable not only to the
+English, but to every church establishment in Christendom, which
+retains any of the marks of the beast. For though the Pope and the
+church of Rome is at the head of the grand twelve hundred and sixty
+years' delusion, yet all other churches, of whatever denomination,
+whether established or tolerated, which partake of the same spirit,
+or have instituted doctrines and ceremonies inimical to the pure
+and unadulterated gospel of Christ, shall sooner or later share in
+the fate of that immense fabric of human ordinances."</p>
+<p>Says Mr. Hopkins: "There is no reason to consider the
+antichristian spirit and practices confined to that which is now
+called the church of Rome. The Protestant churches have much of
+Antichrist in them, and are far from being wholly reformed from the
+corruptions and wickedness, in doctrine and practice, in it. Some
+churches may be more pure and may have proceeded farther in a
+reformation than others; but where can the church be found which is
+thoroughly purged from her abominations? None are wholly clear from
+an antichristian spirit and the fruits of it.... And as the church
+of Rome will have a large share in the cup of indignation and wrath
+which will be poured out, so all the Christian world will have a
+distinguished portion of it: as the inhabitants of it are much more
+guilty than others. There is great <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page363" name="page363"></a>[pg 363]</span> reason to conclude
+that the world, particularly that part of it called Christian and
+Protestant, will yet make greater and more rapid advances in all
+kinds of moral corruption and open wickedness, till it will come to
+that state in which it will be fully ripe and prepared to be cut
+down by the sickle of divine justice and wrath."</p>
+<p>Mr. O. Scott (Wesleyan Methodist) says: "The church is as deeply
+infected with a desire for worldly gain as the world. Most of the
+denominations of the present day might be called <i>churches of the
+world</i>, with more propriety than churches of Christ. The
+churches have so far gone from primitive Christianity that they
+need a fresh regeneration&mdash;a new kind of religion."</p>
+<p>Said T. DeWitt Talmage: "I simply state a fact when I say that
+in many places the church is surrendering, and the world is
+conquering.... There is a mighty host in the Christian church,
+positively professing Christianity, who do not believe the Bible,
+out and out and in and in.... Oh! we have magnificient church
+machinery in this country; we have sixty thousand American
+ministers; we have costly music; we have great Sunday-schools; and
+yet I give you the appalling statistics that in the last
+twenty-five years, laying aside last year, the statistics of which
+I have not yet seen,&mdash;within the last twenty-five years the
+churches of God in this country have averaged <i>less than two
+conversions a year</i> each! There has been an average of four or
+five deaths in the churches. How soon, at that rate, will this
+world be brought to God? We gain two; we lose four. Eternal God!
+what will this come to?"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page364" name="page364"></a>[pg
+364]</span>
+<p>Bishop Roberts said: "The popular religion of this country is
+not the religion of the New Testament. It has some of its features
+but not all. It is lacking in grand fundamental elements. It
+answers many good purposes&mdash;restrains, refines, elevates, and
+gives to society a high grade of civilization; but fails to secure
+the great end which Christianity is designed to
+accomplish&mdash;the salvation of the soul. It dazzles but to
+blind, it promises but to deceive; it allures by worldly
+considerations to a heaven of purity, which no worldling can enter;
+it gives to its votaries, who long to eat of forbidden fruit, the
+assurance of impunity from the threatened evils, and leads them on
+by siren strains from the Paradise of purity into the broad road
+which ends at last in the blackness of the darkness of an eternal
+night of despair!"</p>
+<p>Says the Golden Rule: "The Protestants are outdoing the Popes in
+splendid, extravagant folly in church building. Thousands on
+thousands are expended in gay and costly ornaments to gratify pride
+and a wicked ambition, that might and should go to redeem the
+perishing millions! Does the evil, the folly, and the madness of
+these proud, formal, fashionable worshiper, stop here? These
+splendid monuments of Popish pride, upon which millions are
+squandered in our cities, virtually exclude the poor for whom
+Christ died, and for whom he came especially to preach."</p>
+<p>The report of the Michigan Yearly Conference, even as long ago
+as 1851, published in the True Wesleyan of Nov. 15, says: "The
+world, commercial, political, and ecclesiastical are alike, and are
+together going in the broad way that leads to death. Politics,
+commerce, and nominal religion, all connive at sin, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page365" name="page365"></a>[pg 365]</span>
+reciprocally aid each other, and unite to crush the poor. Falsehood
+is unblushingly uttered in the forum and in the pulpit; and <i>sins
+that would shock the moral sensibilities of the heathen, go
+unrebuked in all the great denominations of our land</i>. These
+churches are like the Jewish church when the Savior exclaimed, 'Woe
+unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites.'"</p>
+<p>Robert Atkins, in a sermon preached in London, says: "The truly
+righteous are diminished from the earth, and no man layeth it to
+heart. The professors of religion of the present day, in every
+church, are lovers of the world, conformers to the world. Lovers of
+creature-comfort, and aspirers after respectability. They are
+called to <i>suffer</i> with Christ, but they shrink even from
+reproach. Apostasy, <i>apostasy</i>, APOSTASY, is engraven on the
+very front of every church; and did they know it, and did they feel
+it, there might be hope; but alas! they cry 'We are rich, and
+increased in goods, and stand in need of nothing.'"</p>
+<p>I have by no means exhausted the supply of similar testimonies
+of Protestants now before me, but for lack of space I must
+conclude. In the face of these amazing facts can any one deny that
+Protestantism is a part of great Babylon and is in a fallen
+condition?</p>
+<p>"The merchants of the earth are waxed rich through the abundance
+of her delicacies." A certain writer on this text has said: "Who
+take the lead in all the extravagancies of the age? Church-members.
+Who load their tables with the richest and choicest viands?
+Church-members. Who are foremost in extravagance in dress, and all
+costly attire? Church-members. Who are the very personification of
+pride and arrogance? <span class="pagenum"><a id="page366" name=
+"page366"></a>[pg 366]</span> Church-members. Where shall we look
+for the very highest exhibition of the luxury, even show, and pride
+of life, resulting from the vanity and sin of the race? Answer, To
+a modern church-assembly on a pleasant Sunday." Though this writer
+interpreted the text literally, yet he spoke a vast amount of
+truth, as every one knows.</p>
+<p>Consider, too, the wickedness carried on everywhere in sect
+Babylon unrebuked, with the preachers ofttimes in the lead. Shows,
+festivals, frolics, grab-bag parties, cake-walk lotteries,
+kissing-bees, etc., etc. If the apostle were here to-day and we
+should inform him of a modern church entertainment where a bared
+female foot, projecting from beneath a curtain, was sold to the
+highest gentleman bidder, who had the privilege of kissing its
+owner and taking her to supper, he would probably answer, "Have I
+not told you, 'Babylon is fallen'?" If his attention was called to
+the fact that the members of a prominent church, in a novel
+entertainment, displayed the likeness of a donkey, minus the tail,
+while the members one by one were blindfolded, and, amid the
+uproarous laughter of the crowd assembled, were given the detached
+part to see who could place it the nearest where it belonged, he
+would say with double emphasis, "<i>Have I not told you</i>,
+'BABYLON THE GREAT IS FALLEN, IS FALLEN, AND IS BECOME THE
+HABITATION OF DEVILS, AND THE HOLD OF EVERY FOUL SPIRIT, AND A CAGE
+OF EVERY UNCLEAN AND HATEFUL BIRD'?" The "abominations" are by no
+means confined to the <i>mother</i> in the Revelation, but are also
+to be found in abundance in connection with her harlot
+daughters.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page367" name="page367"></a>[pg
+367]</span> <a name="chap18-4" id="chap18-4"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>4. And I heard another voice from heaven, saying, Come out of
+her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye
+receive not of her plagues.</p>
+<p>5. For her sins have reached unto heaven, and God hath
+remembered her iniquities.</p>
+<p>6. Reward her even as she rewarded yon, and double unto her
+double according to her works: in the cup which she hath filled
+fill to her double.</p>
+<p>7. How much she hath glorified herself, and lived deliciously,
+so much torment and sorrow give her: for she saith in her heart, I
+sit a queen, and am no widow, and shall see no sorrow.</p>
+<p>8. Therefore shall her plagues come in one day, death, and
+mourning, and famine; and she shall be utterly burned with fire:
+for strong is the Lord God who judgeth her.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Here we have a number of important truths brought before
+us&mdash;first, that God had a people in Babylon who up to this
+time were free from her contaminations; second, that they received
+a positive call from heaven to "come out"; third, that all who
+refused to obey the heavenly command would become partakers of her
+sins and receive of her plagues; fourth, that those who came out
+were to pour the strongest judgments upon Babylon&mdash;"reward her
+even as she rewarded you, and double unto her double according to
+her works: in the cup which she hath filled, fill to her double."
+It is evident that the "torment and sorrow" which God's people give
+Babylon after their departure is not a temporal
+retaliation&mdash;for they never indulge in such, and the Word of
+God forbids it&mdash;but is altogether of a spiritual nature; hence
+the fierce judgment they inflict is executing the Word of truth,
+which brings to light all the wickedness and abominations
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page368" name="page368"></a>[pg
+368]</span> contained therein. "Death, and mourning, and famine"
+only remain. This symbolizes that all spiritual life has departed,
+while famine and mourning are left. That such is the actual fact is
+shown by the following lamentation of the late Bishop R.S. Foster
+concerning his own sect, the Methodist Episcopal:</p>
+<p>"The ball, the theatre, nude and lewd art, social luxuries, with
+all their loose moralities, are making inroads into the sacred
+enclosure of the church; and as a satisfaction for all this
+worldliness, Christians are making a great deal of Lent and Easter
+and Good Friday, and church ornamentations. It is the old trick of
+Satan. The Jewish church struck on that rock; the Romish church was
+wrecked on the same; and the Protestant church is fast reaching the
+same doom.</p>
+<p>"Our great dangers as we see them, are assimilation to the
+world, neglect of the poor, substitution of the form for the fact
+of godliness, abandonment of discipline, a hireling ministry, an
+impure gospel, which summed up is a fashionable church. That
+Methodists should be liable to such an outcome, and that there
+should be signs of it in a hundred years from the 'sail-loft,'
+seems almost the miracle of history; but who that looks about him
+to-day can fail to see the fact?</p>
+<p>"Do not Methodists, in violation of God's Word and their own
+discipline, dress as extravagantly and as fashionably as any other
+class? Do not the ladies, and even the wives and daughters of the
+ministry, put on 'gold and pearls and costly array'? Would not the
+plain dress insisted upon by John Wesley and Bishop Asbury, and
+worn by Hester Ann Rodgers, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page369"
+name="page369"></a>[pg 369]</span> Lady Huntington, and many others
+equally distinguished, be now regarded in Methodist circles as
+fanaticism? Can any one going into the Methodist church in any of
+our chief cities distinguish the attire of the communicants from
+that of the theater and ball-goers? Is not worldliness seen in the
+music? Elaborately dressed and ornamented choirs, who in many cases
+make no profession of religion and are often sneering skeptics, go
+through a cold artistic or operatic performance, which is as much
+in harmony with spiritual worship as an opera or theater. Under
+such worldly performances spirituality is frozen to death.</p>
+<p>"Formerly every Methodist attended class and gave testimony of
+experimental religion. Now the class-meeting is attended by very
+few, and in many churches abandoned. Seldom the stewards, trustees
+and elders of the church attend class. Formerly nearly every
+Methodist prayed, testified or exhorted in prayer-meeting. Now but
+very few are heard. Formerly shouts and praises were heard; now
+such demostrations of holy enthusiasm and joy are regarded as
+fanaticism.</p>
+<p>"Worldly socials, and fairs, festivals, concerts and such like
+have taken the place of religious gatherings, revival meetings,
+class and prayer meetings of earlier days. How true that the
+Methodist discipline is a dead letter! Its rules forbid the wearing
+of gold or pearls or costly array; yet no one ever thinks of
+disciplining its members for violating them. They forbid the
+reading of such books and the taking of such diversions as do not
+minister to godliness, yet the church itself goes to frolics and
+festivals and fairs, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page370" name=
+"page370"></a>[pg 370]</span> which destroy the spiritual life of
+the young, as well as the old. The extent to which this is now
+carried on is appalling. The <i>spiritual death it carries in its
+train</i> will only be known when <i>the millions it has swept into
+hell</i> shall stand before the judgment.</p>
+<p>"The early Methodist ministers went forth to sacrifice and to
+suffer for Christ. They sought not places of ease and affluence,
+but of privation and suffering. They gloried not in their big
+salaries, fine parsonages, and refined congregations, but in the
+souls that had been won for Jesus. Oh, <i>how changed!</i> A
+hireling ministry will be a feeble, a timid, a truckling, a
+timeserving ministry, without faith, endurance, and holy power.
+Methodism formerly dealt in the great central truth. Now the
+pulpits deal largely in the generalities and in popular lectures.
+The glorious doctrine of entire sanctification is rarely heard and
+seldom witnessed in the pulpits."</p>
+<p>This lengthy quotation shows clearly the spiritual condition of
+Methodism, and certainly she is no worse than the rest. God is
+calling his people out of "all the places where they have been
+scattered in the cloudy and dark day." Ezek. 34:12. Those who
+refuse to walk in the light will go into darkness. God help people
+to "flee out of the midst of Babylon, and deliver every man his
+soul."</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>9. And the kings of the earth, who have committed fornication
+and lived deliciously with her, shall bewail her, and lament for
+her, when they shall see the smoke of her burning,</p>
+<p>10. Standing afar off for the fear of her torment, saying, Alas,
+alas that great city Babylon, that mighty city! for in one hour is
+thy judgment come.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page371" name="page371"></a>[pg
+371]</span>
+<p>11. And the merchants of the earth shall weep and mourn over
+her; for no man buyeth their merchandise any more:</p>
+<p>12. The merchandise of gold, and silver, and precious stones,
+and of pearls, and fine linen, and purple, and silk, and scarlet,
+and all thyine wood, and all manner vessels of ivory, and all
+manner vessels of most precious wood, and of brass, and iron, and
+marble,</p>
+<p>13. And cinnamon, and odors, and ointments, and frankincense,
+and wine, and oil, and fine flour, and wheat, and beasts, and
+sheep, and horses, and chariots, and slaves, and souls of men.</p>
+<p>14. And the fruits that thy soul lusted after are departed from
+thee, and all things which were dainty and goodly are departed from
+thee, and thou shalt find them no more at all.</p>
+<p>15. The merchants of these things, which were made rich by her,
+shall stand afar off for the fear of her torment, weeping and
+wailing,</p>
+<p>16. And saying, Alas, alas that great city, that was clothed in
+fine linen, and purple, and scarlet, and decked with gold, and
+precious stones, and pearls!</p>
+<p>17. For in one hour so great riches is come to nought. And every
+shipmaster, and all the company in ships, and sailors, and as many
+as trade by sea, stood afar off,</p>
+<p>18. And cried when they saw the smoke of her burning, saying,
+What city is like unto this great city!</p>
+<p>19. And they cast dust on their heads, and cried, weeping and
+wailing, saying, Alas, alas that great city, wherein were made rich
+all that had ships in the sea by reason of her costliness! for in
+one hour is she made desolate.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In this description we have a continuation of the judgments of
+Babylon already introduced. It must <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page372" name="page372"></a>[pg 372]</span> be borne in mind,
+however, that this is the spiritual judgments following her moral
+fall, and not her final and everlasting literal destruction. The
+latter is described under another symbol a little further on in
+this series of prophecy.</p>
+<p>The symbol here is that of a great city, the grand metropolis of
+the world, the mart of earth's commerce; a superb city, their
+[<i>sic</i>] being no end to its luxuries and magnificence. In it
+everything that can minister to the appetite, gratify the taste,
+and feed the pride of the human soul is to be found in profusion,
+being described at length. This great city is suddenly afire, and
+her merchants and the great men of the world who sustain her are
+overwhelmed with sorrow at the sight of all their wealth
+disappearing. Thus is great sect Babylon represented. She is a
+mighty city extending not only over the Apocalyptic earth, but, as
+symbolized by the ship-masters, sailors, and foreign traders, over
+the whole world. Suddenly she is set on fire by heaven's truth and
+her spiritual magnificence destroyed. The apostle Paul describes
+the great apostasy as a system that the "Lord shall <i>consume</i>
+with the spirit of his mouth, and shall <i>destroy</i> with the
+brightness of his coming." 2 Thes. 2:8. That spiritual consumption
+is now taking place in accordance with the symbols of this chapter,
+but the entire literal destruction of old Babylon will take place
+coincident "with the brightness of his coming," as described in the
+following chapter.</p>
+<p>That sectarians are greatly alarmed over the sad condition of
+their fallen churches is clearly shown by the many quotations
+already given from Protestant writers. They may not be aware that
+it is a judgment <span class="pagenum"><a id="page373" name=
+"page373"></a>[pg 373]</span> from heaven upon man-made
+organizations; but such we know it to be in the light of eternal
+truth. Not only are they bewailing the loss of spiritual life and
+the desolating famine in sectdom, as was Bishop Foster and others,
+but they are beginning to tremble for their own safety and to
+wonder what the final outcome of it all will be. Wherever the
+gospel truth has been preached in all its purity, the sectarian
+denominations have been left destitute of spiritual life; for the
+children of God have heard his call, "Come out of her, my people,"
+and have made their escape to Zion. Hence the ministers of Babylon
+cry out continually, "Stop! you are tearing our churches down,"
+"You are taking our best members away from us," etc. But we can not
+withhold the truth; for the time has come when God is gathering his
+people together out of all the "places where they have been
+scattered in the cloudy and dark day" (Ezek. 34:12) into the one
+church that Jesus built. "Babylon is fallen, is fallen."</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>20. Rejoice over her, thou heaven, and ye holy apostles and
+prophets; for God hath avenged you on her.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This verse is so clear that it requires no special explanation.
+God's people are delivered from sect Babylon; and while the
+judgments of eternal truth are being poured out upon her, all
+heaven and earth is called upon to rejoice and to give glory to
+God.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"We stand in the glory that Jesus has given,</p>
+<p class="i2">The moon as the day-spring doth shine;</p>
+<p>The light of the sun is now equal to seven,</p>
+<p class="i2">So bright is the glory divine.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page374" name="page374"></a>[pg
+374]</span></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Now filled with the Spirit and clad in the armor</p>
+<p class="i2">Of light and omnipotent truth,</p>
+<p>We'll testify ever and Jesus we'll honor,</p>
+<p class="i2">And stand from sin Babel aloof.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"The prophet's keen vision transpiercing the ages,</p>
+<p class="i2">Beheld us to Zion return;</p>
+<p>We'll sing of our freedom, though Babylon rages,</p>
+<p class="i2">We'll shout as her city doth burn."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<blockquote>
+<p>21. And a mighty angel took up a stone like a great millstone,
+and cast it into the sea, saying, Thus with violence shall that
+great city Babylon be thrown down, and shall be found no more at
+all.</p>
+<p>22. And the voice of harpers, and musicians, and of pipers, and
+trumpeters, shall be heard no more at all in thee; and no
+craftsman, of whatsoever craft he be, shall be found any more in
+thee; and the sound of a millstone shall be heard no more at all in
+thee;</p>
+<p>23. And the light of a candle shall shine no more at all in
+thee; and the voice of the bridegroom and of the bride shall be
+heard no more at all in thee: for thy merchants were the great men
+of the earth; for by thy sorceries were all nations deceived.</p>
+<p>24. And in her was found the blood of prophets, and of saints,
+and of all that were slain upon the earth.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Following the moral fall of Babylon and the call of God's people
+out of her, a mighty angel predicts her eternal doom. "With
+violence shall that great city Babylon be thrown down, and <i>shall
+be found no more at all</i>." This doubtless has reference to the
+entire city of Babylon in all her divisions brought to view in this
+series of prophecy and shows her final destruction <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page375" name="page375"></a>[pg 375]</span> at the
+coming of Christ, when she shall suddenly be thrown with terrific
+force, like a great millstone descending into the sea, and "shall
+be found no more at all." According to the symbols here given she
+will be like a city completely destroyed, not one inhabitant or
+living creature remaining. Thus her eternal doom is pictured and
+remains to be yet fulfilled.</p>
+<p>"And in her was found the blood of prophets, and of saints, and
+of all that were slain upon the earth." We have already shown that
+Protestantism, as well as her mother Romanism, has been guilty of
+shedding innocent blood; and as the term Babylon includes both
+these divisions, when the great city is thrown down with violence,
+Romanism and Protestantism will sink together, and then this awful
+treasure&mdash;the blood of prophets and of saints&mdash;shall be
+brought to light in that last great day of God Almighty.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page376" name="page376"></a>[pg
+376]</span> <a name="chap19" id="chap19"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
+<a name="chap19-1" id="chap19-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And after these things I heard a great voice of much people in
+heaven, saying, Alleluia; Salvation, and glory, and honor, and
+power, unto the Lord our God:</p>
+<p>2. For true and righteous are his judgments: for he hath judged
+the great whore, which did corrupt the earth with her fornication,
+and hath avenged the blood of his servants at her hand.</p>
+<p>3. And again they said, Alleluia. And her smoke rose up for ever
+and ever.</p>
+<p>4. And the four and twenty elders and the four beasts fell down
+and worshipped God that sat on the throne, saying, Amen;
+Alleluia.</p>
+<p>5. And a voice came out of the throne, saying, Praise our God,
+all ye his servants, and ye that fear him, both small and
+great.</p>
+<p>6. And I heard as it were the voice of a great multitude, and as
+the voice of many waters, and as the voice of mighty thunderings,
+saying, Alleluia: for the Lord God omnipotent reigneth.</p>
+<p>7. Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honor to him: for the
+marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife hath made herself
+ready.</p>
+<a name="chap19-8" id="chap19-8"></a>
+<p>8. And to her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine
+linen, clean and white: for the fine linen is the righteousness of
+saints.</p>
+<p>9. And he saith unto me, Write, Blessed are they which are
+called unto the marriage supper of the Lamb. And he saith unto me,
+These are the true sayings of God.</p>
+<a name="chap19-10" id="chap19-10"></a>
+<p>10. And I fell at his feet to worship him. And he said unto me,
+See thou do it not: I am thy fellowservant, and of thy brethren
+that have the testimony of Jesus: worship God: for the testimony of
+Jesus is the spirit of prophecy.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page377" name="page377"></a>[pg
+377]</span>
+<p>The scene of this vision is laid in heaven. John heard a great
+voice of much people saying, "Alleluia; Salvation, and glory, and
+honor, and power, unto the Lord our God." This great song of praise
+doubtless came from the lips of the angelic throng; for immediately
+the four living creatures and the four and twenty elders reechoed
+the same shout of praise, saying, "Amen; Alleluia." Then came a
+voice from the throne calling upon the servants of God, both small
+and great, to unite on this occasion in one grand and sacred song
+of praise; and this sublime chorus fell upon the ear of the
+enraptured apostle "as it were the voice of a great multitude, and
+as the voice of many waters, and as the voice of mighty
+thunderings, saying, Alleluia: for the Lord God omnipotent
+reigneth. Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honor to him for the
+marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife [or bride] hath made
+herself ready." Was not here a hearty response to that call,
+"Rejoice over her thou heaven"? While this scene shows the interest
+all heaven takes in these wondrous scenes of earth, it is doubtless
+intended especially to represent the joy and thanksgiving of God's
+people who have "gotten the victory over the beast, and over his
+image, and over his mark, and over the number of his name."</p>
+<p>The marriage of the Lamb which was about to take place was a
+special theme of joy on this occasion. In the Scripture the term
+<i>marriage</i> is frequently used to represent a special union
+between Christ and his people. Thus, the early church was
+represented as being free because of the death of the law, that
+they "should be <i>married</i> to another, even to him who is
+raised from the dead." Rom. 7:4. So, also, the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page378" name="page378"></a>[pg 378]</span>
+eternal union of Christ with his people is here described under the
+figure of marriage. In one sense they have been married to Christ
+all through this dispensation; in another sense they have not. The
+church has had the promise of this eternal union, hence she has
+been betrothed to Christ; but left in the world, she has been
+driven into the wilderness, while a corrupt and drunken prostitute
+and her harlot daughters have been in the public view. Now,
+however, the judgments of God have descended upon Babylon, and the
+bride of Christ appears in all her beauty again, "arrayed in fine
+linen, clean and white"; and the next great event is her public
+marriage to Christ when he comes to claim her as his own.</p>
+<p>The marriage scene is one of the most joyful that we witness on
+earth, and among Eastern nations especially was celebrated with
+great pomp and magnificence, the joy and splendor of the occasion
+being enhanced according to the rank and wealth of the parties. But
+earth has never witnessed such an event as this special <i>marriage
+of the Lamb</i>. Well may the inhabitants of heaven and earth, in
+view of this sublime spectacle, swell the song of praise&mdash;"Let
+us be glad and rejoice, and give honor to him: for the marriage of
+the Lamb is come, and his wife hath made herself ready." The
+special preparations that the bride is making represents the
+glorious holiness reformation that is now sweeping over the world,
+gathering God's people together for the splendid event. "Blessed
+are they which are called unto the marriage supper of the
+Lamb."</p>
+<p>"These are the true sayings of God." They are almost too
+glorious to be believed; still, they are no <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page379" name="page379"></a>[pg 379]</span> idle
+dreams of fancy: they are true, yea "the true sayings of God." In
+the contemplation of such a wonderful event, the beloved apostle
+was carried away, as it were, with holy enthusiasm, and he fell at
+the feet of the angel to worship. We do not know just what the
+motives or impressions were that caused him to do this. But his
+soul was full, full to overflowing, and he could not but adore and
+worship. The angel, however, refused the homage thus offered, by
+the declaration that he himself, also, was the servant of Christ
+and one of the brethren that had the testimony of Jesus; "for the
+testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy." The idea is: "I am a
+fellowservant with you, and we both have his testimony. You bear
+witness to him now in this present generation; I bear witness to
+those who are to come. You witness now of his death and
+resurrection; I tell of his future glory and triumphs. We are both,
+therefore, engaged in the same good work. The testimony of Jesus
+and the spirit of prophecy are the same. To God, therefore, we must
+both bow." See remarks on chap. 1:1.</p>
+<a name="chap19-11" id="chap19-11"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>11. And I saw heaven opened, and behold a white horse; and he
+that sat upon him was called Faithful and True, and in
+righteousness he doth judge and make war.</p>
+<p>12. His eyes were as a flame <i>of</i> fire, and on his head
+were many crowns; and he had a name written, that no man knew, but
+he himself.</p>
+<p>13. And he was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood: and his
+name is called The Word of God.</p>
+<p>14. And the armies which were in heaven followed him upon white
+horses, clothed in fine linen, white and clean.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page380" name="page380"></a>[pg
+380]</span>
+<p>15. And out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword, that with it he
+should smite the nations: and he shall rule them with a rod of
+iron: and he treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of
+Almighty God.</p>
+<p>16. And he hath on his vesture and on his thigh a name written,
+KING OF KINGS, AND LORD OF LORDS.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>That the person described in this vision is Christ is questioned
+by no one. He is the same one who appeared to John in the
+beginning. Then he stood in the midst of the seven golden
+candle-sticks, the sure defense of the churches, holding the seven
+stars in his right hand. Now, however, he appears from the opened
+heavens on a white horse, his mission "to judge and make war." The
+description of his person, his names, and his attributes,
+unmistakably proclaim him the Son of God. He is the "faithful and
+true," the name by which he made himself known to the churches of
+Philadelphia and Laodicea. "His eyes as a flame of fire" denotes
+omniscience; and as a searcher of all hearts he made himself known
+to the church of Thyatira. "Many crowns" are a symbol of supreme
+sovereignty and doubtless signify his many victories. "And he had a
+name written which no man knew but he himself." He had names by
+which he might be known to mortals; but he had one name that no
+created intelligence could understand: it was known only to him.
+What that name was, of course, is not given; it could not be. If
+the human mind could not conceive it, human language could not
+convey it. We can know him as the Faithful and true Witness, as the
+Word of God, and as King of kings and Lord of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page381" name="page381"></a>[pg 381]</span> lords;
+but there is one name that we can not know. His "vesture dipped in
+blood" refers, not to the blood of atonement, but to the blood of
+his enemies sprinkled upon his raiment in treading the winepress of
+God's wrath, and denotes that he was going forth to the dread work
+of vengeance. To this I shall refer more fully hereafter. His name
+is also called "the Word of God," which, when used as a personal
+appellation in the Scriptures, always signifies Jesus Christ.</p>
+<p>Before considering his mission further and the armies that
+accompanied him, I wish to call special attention to the nature and
+the chronology of this event. If the present series of prophetic
+symbols (which begin with <a href="#chap17">chap. 17</a>) is a
+narrative of continuous events reaching to the end, then the vision
+before us is a description of the second coming of Christ, the
+event which was just previously announced and for which the bride
+had made herself ready. The usual interpretation given it is, that
+it is a sublime description of the servants of Christ going forth
+under his direction to spread the truth everywhere among the
+nations&mdash;in short, that it is the triumph of gospel truth over
+error under the <i>providential</i> government of Christ. That such
+a meaning can be derived from the vision by taking it in a
+<i>figurative</i> sense there can be no doubt, and this is what
+commentators generally do. They make the whole a figurative
+description of the triumph of the gospel, Christ being present only
+by his superintending providence. It is made simply a highly poetic
+description of the victory of truth and righteousness. In this
+case, however, the principles of symbolic language are clearly
+abandoned and a mere ordinary figurative meaning <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page382" name="page382"></a>[pg 382]</span> given.
+If we follow strictly the laws of symbolic language, as we
+manifestly ought, we shall be compelled to take another view of
+it.</p>
+<p>In the first place, if this does not describe the actual coming
+of Christ, then his second coming is nowhere described in the
+Revelation. That so great an event should merely be alluded to in a
+few places and nowhere symbolically described seems incredible. At
+the judgment scene brought to view in the following chapter the
+presence of Christ is <i>assumed</i>, but it is not stated. Again,
+there are no victories of love and mercy described at all in the
+vision before us; but, on the contrary, it is a scene of fearful
+judgment&mdash;a terrible treading of "the winepress of the
+fierceness and wrath of Almighty God," the complete overthrow of
+every opposing power; while the beast and the false prophet are
+represented as taken and cast alive into a lake of fire burning
+with brimstone. Surely, this is not the work of the church of God.
+But let it be remembered especially that this last event takes
+place under the <i>seventh</i> plague, which is the "filling up" of
+the wrath of God, and that Christ previously announced under the
+sixth vial, "Behold, <i>I come</i> as a thief." Christ comes in
+reality when this seventh plague occurs. To represent the glorious
+triumphs of Christianity by the mission of the church, the gospel
+and the Holy Spirit, under the symbol of Christ, going forth to
+judge, to make war, and to tread the winepress of God's wrath, is
+at war with every principle of symbolic language.</p>
+<p>But can this vision of Christ upon a white horse denote a mere
+providential superintendence, such as Christ constantly exercises
+over the church and its <span class="pagenum"><a id="page383" name=
+"page383"></a>[pg 383]</span> spiritual affairs on earth? Certainly
+not by any principle of symbolic language. Throughout the whole
+prophecy thus far we have seen that whenever any symbolic agent is
+brought upon the panorama, whether horseman, or beasts, or locusts,
+or harlot, or whatever else, it always denotes some corresponding
+agents appearing on earth and beginning their appropriate work. The
+symbolic agent is real. But here is a symbolic appearance of
+Christ. By what law could such a symbolic appearance represent
+merely a providential superintendence? And if his appearance was
+necessary in this case, why was it not necessary in every event, to
+show that it was done under his direction? Again, if this symbolic
+appearance of Christ is not his real appearance, how can we tell
+that there is any reality in the appearance of the horsemen of the
+first four seals, the ten-horned beast, or the harlot woman? What
+right have we to remove one agent from the panorama as an actual
+agent there any more than another? And if this is not his real
+appearance, upon what principle of interpretation can we ever
+establish the fact of his second coming? It is evident to all that,
+if we can turn this agent into a mere providential one, we can do
+the same with another, and thus set aside his second coming
+altogether. Then, what shall we say in the next chapter when some
+one steals our weapons and declares that the great white throne
+before which all the dead, small and great, stand is nothing but
+that providential government of God under which all sinners pass
+condemnation upon themselves and their sins find them out? If we
+can deal thus with symbols, we can do <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page384" name="page384"></a>[pg 384]</span> anything with them and
+can make out any meaning we please.</p>
+<p>The laws of symbolic language require us to take the appearance
+of Christ in this vision just as we do the appearance of any other
+agent, as a real event. We can not consistently give it any other
+meaning. His <i>symbolic</i> appearance must represent his
+<i>real</i> appearance; otherwise, it can never be represented by
+anything. Jesus appears in his own name and person because there is
+no other that can represent his infinite dignity and majesty. And
+the symbols connected with him denote the object of his mission and
+the work which he performs. His white horse shows him now a
+glorious conqueror; his crowns denote his supreme dominion; the
+sword of his mouth and his vesture dipped in blood denote the dread
+work of vengeance upon his enemies; while the army following him
+doubtless denotes the "ten thousands of his saints" that accompany
+him when he comes. Jude 14. The bride has already prepared herself
+for his coming, and now the eternal union takes place. "Blessed are
+they which are called unto the marriage supper of the Lamb."</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>17. And I saw an angel standing in the sun; and he cried with a
+loud voice, saying to all the fowls that fly in the midst of
+heaven, Come and gather yourselves together unto the supper of the
+great God;</p>
+<p>18. That ye may eat the flesh of kings, and the flesh of
+captains, and the flesh of mighty men, and the flesh of horses; and
+of them that sit on them, and the flesh of all men, both free and
+bond, both small and great.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page385" name="page385"></a>[pg
+385]</span>
+<p>19. And I saw the beast, and the kings of the earth, and their
+armies, gathered together to make war against him that sat on the
+horse, and against his army.</p>
+<a name="chap19-20" id="chap19-20"></a>
+<p>20. And the beast was taken, and with him the false prophet that
+wrought miracles before him, with which he deceived them that had
+received the mark of the beast, and them that worshipped his image.
+These both were cast alive into a lake of fire burning with
+brimstone.</p>
+<p>21. And the remnant were slain with the sword of him that sat
+upon the horse, which sword proceeded out of his mouth: and all the
+fowls were filled with their flesh.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The foregoing explanation so nearly covers this ground that
+little remains to be said. The symbol is that of vast slaughter on
+a battle-field, which gathers all the birds of heaven and the
+beasts of the forest to the prey. The enemies gathered for this
+battle were "the beast, and the kings of the earth, and their
+armies," together with the false prophet. This is the grand
+confederacy of wickedness formed under the mission of the three
+unclean spirits that went forth, not only unto the kings of the
+earth, but also into the whole world. This is not a literal
+collecting of armies, hence not a literal slaughter upon a
+battlefield, nor a literal assembling of carrion birds; but it is a
+symbolic representation of the final and eternal destruction of the
+allied powers of sin. As will be further described in the following
+chapter, they were gathered together for the purpose of
+overthrowing the church of God and anticipated a complete victory
+in the battle of Armageddon; but the sudden appearance of Jesus
+Christ to rescue his bride results in <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page386" name="page386"></a>[pg 386]</span> their complete
+overthrow. The special theme of this series of prophecy has been
+the history of apostate Christendom; hence the beast and the false
+prophet are represented as being taken and thrown into the lake of
+fire burning with brimstone. "The remnant" that were slain refers
+to the other powers of wickedness not embraced in Catholicism and
+Protestantism This series being now traced to its close, the
+narrative returns to take up another important theme of prophetic
+truth.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page387" name="page387"></a>[pg
+387]</span> <a name="chap20" id="chap20"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
+<a name="chap20-1" id="chap20-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And I saw an angel come down from heaven, having the key of the
+bottomless pit and a great chain in his hand.</p>
+<p>2. And he laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is
+the Devil, and Satan, and bound him a thousand years.</p>
+<p>3. And cast him into the bottomless pit, and shut him up, and
+set a seal upon him, that he should deceive the nations no more,
+till the thousand years should be fulfilled: and after that he must
+be loosed a little season.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is commonly supposed that the events here described are to
+occur at the second advent; but by considering carefully the
+different things enumerated in this chapter&mdash;the binding of
+the dragon; then a thousand years; after that the Armageddon
+battle; and last of all the judgment scene, in which all the dead,
+both small and great, are rewarded, and all the powers of
+wickedness cast into the lake of fire&mdash;it will be seen at once
+that this is not a continuation of the series of prophecy
+immediately preceding, but an entirely new theme, running partly
+parallel with that series, and both ending at the same
+point&mdash;the second coming of Christ and the general judgment,
+in which the lake of fire is the final doom of the combined powers
+of wickedness. In that series the beast and the false
+prophet&mdash;Romanism and Protestantism&mdash;were the chief
+powers of evil under consideration; in this series the dragon
+feature predominates. If this be not true, then there will be two
+judgment scenes <span class="pagenum"><a id="page388" name=
+"page388"></a>[pg 388]</span> and the wicked cast into the lake of
+fire twice. Positive proof of the position here taken will be given
+as we proceed.</p>
+<p>The power here referred to as "the Devil and Satan" is also
+denominated "the dragon." This use of the definite article shows
+clearly that a particular character is designated&mdash;<i>the</i>
+dragon&mdash;and implies that the object has already been
+introduced. In his first appearance upon the symbolic panorama
+(chap. <a href="#chap12-3">12:3</a>) he is simply styled <i>a</i>
+dragon, but in every subsequent instance he is called <i>the</i>
+dragon, which proves that the same character is meant. In addition
+to the former remarks on chapter <a href="#chap12-9">12:9</a>
+relative to the terms applied to this antichristian power, the
+following quotation from the People's Cyclop&aelig;dia will throw
+some light on the subject: "In the mythical history and legendary
+poetry of almost every nation, the dragon appears as the emblem of
+the destructive and anarchistic principle.... Like the serpent, the
+dragon is always a minister of evil ... the object of which is to
+fight order, harmony, and progress. In Christian art, the dragon is
+the emblem of sin.... It is often represented as crushed under the
+feet of saints and martyrs.... Sometimes its prostrate attitude
+signifies the triumph of Christianity over Paganism." Art. Dragon.
+Considering this usage of these terms for ages, it is not strange
+that they were applied also to that great antichristian,
+persecuting system of Paganism, which stood before Christianity as
+its greatest barrier to "order, harmony, and progress."</p>
+<p>The angel that overthrew this public system of Pagan infidelity
+symbolizes the primitive host of <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page389" name="page389"></a>[pg 389]</span> Christians, the
+ministers in particular. Some have supposed that he represented
+Christ; but, as already shown conclusively, Christ can not be
+symbolized by an inferior intelligence, hence always appears upon
+the scene in his own character, proclaiming his own eternal name.
+The fact that this angel possessed the key of the bottomless pit is
+no proof that he is Christ, even though in chapter <a href=
+"#chap1-18">1:18</a> Jesus is said to have certain keys; for in
+chapter <a href="#chap9-1">9:1</a> we find that a <i>fallen
+star</i>&mdash;the symbol of Mohammed&mdash;is said to have "the
+key of the bottomless pit" also. At the most, this expression is
+only a symbol of power and authority, be it good or bad. In the
+gospel the same figure is applied to God's ministers, where they
+are given authority to bind the powers of wickedness on earth. Mat.
+16:19; 18:18. The chain is a symbol of the power to bind.</p>
+<p>When Christianity first commenced its warfare with this huge
+system of error, almost the entire then-known world was under its
+deceptive influence; but by a long conflict, in which thousands of
+the noble followers of the Lamb were slaughtered, this
+antichristian public system of Pagan infidelity was at last
+completely overthrown, and the final result was, that the civilized
+world became as completely Christian (nominally at least) as it
+ever had been Pagan. This great transformation could never have
+been effected without the undying heroism and whole-hearted
+consecration of the first disciples of Christ. From this time the
+dragon <i>as such</i>&mdash;as a public deceiver of the nations
+throughout the Apocalyptic earth&mdash;was overthrown. This marks
+the beginning of the thousand years mentioned.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page390" name="page390"></a>[pg
+390]</span>
+<p>Since many of the principles of heathenism were copied by the
+church of Rome, it may be difficult for some to understand at first
+why it is said that the dragon no longer deceived the nations after
+being cast down by primitive Christianity; but this becomes clear
+when we consider what the dragon really was and what the church of
+Rome was understood to be. A time came when the entire civilized
+world knew that heathenism as such was wrong and rejected the very
+idea of a plurality of gods; but they were led to believe that they
+could adapt many of their former rites and ceremonies to the
+worship of the one true God in whom they believed and thereby
+render acceptable service to him, and were sure that the Romish
+church was the one true apostolic church. It was not the dragon, or
+heathenism, that then deceived them; it was Christianity&mdash;<i>a
+false Christianity</i>. The manner in which the people were
+deceived during the time following the casting down of heathenism
+in the beginning has already been considered in chapters <a href=
+"#chap12">XII</a>, <a href="#chap13">XIII</a>, <a href=
+"#chap17">XVII</a>, <a href="#chap18">XVIII</a>, etc., covering the
+same period of time included in the one thousand years in the
+vision before us.</p>
+<p>We can not apply this period specified as literally one thousand
+years without varying from every principle of time prophecy in the
+Revelation, for they are all symbolic; neither can we apply it
+according to the usual year-day method, which, signifying three
+hundred and sixty thousand years, would throw this series of events
+out of harmony with the time-periods allotted to the other themes
+of truth running over the same ground and terminating at the same
+point&mdash;the general judgment. Therefore, to be consistent, we
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page391" name="page391"></a>[pg
+391]</span> shall have to apply it as (so far as human knowledge of
+the exact dates is concerned) an indefinite length of time, on the
+same principle that "the hour of temptation" in chapter <a href=
+"#chap3-10">3:10</a>, the three and one-half days in chapter
+<a href="#chap11-9">11:9</a>, and the "hour" in which the ten
+kingdoms receive power with the beast (chap. <a href=
+"#chap17-12">17:12</a>), etc., are applied.</p>
+<a name="chap20-4" id="chap20-4"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>4. And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them, and judgment was
+given unto them: and I saw the souls of them that were beheaded for
+the witness of Jesus, and for the word of God, and which had not
+worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither had received his
+mark upon their foreheads, or in their hands; and they lived and
+reigned with Christ a thousand years.</p>
+<p>5. But the rest of the dead lived not again until the thousand
+years were finished. This is the first resurrection.</p>
+<a name="chap20-6" id="chap20-6"></a>
+<p>6. Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first
+resurrection: on such the second death hath no power, but they
+shall be priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with him a
+thousand years.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>We have in this description another division of the subject
+introduced&mdash;a history of God's people, or one phase of the
+church, during the same thousand years following the casting down
+of the dragon. "They lived and reigned with Christ." It was those
+who had "part in the first resurrection" that were exalted to this
+honored position with Christ. Millenarians always <i>assume</i>
+that this refers to a literal resurrection at the second coming of
+Christ, but no such thing is hinted at. Not one word is said about
+literally resurrected saints reigning. John says, "I <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page392" name="page392"></a>[pg 392]</span> saw
+the <i>souls</i> of them which were beheaded for the witness of
+Jesus ... and <i>they</i> lived and reigned with Christ a thousand
+years." Nothing whatever is said about any reign on earth at all;
+but the description shows plainly that it was disembodied spirits
+that were reigning with Christ in Paradise during the period that
+followed the casting down of the dragon, which was in reality one
+of long apostasy and darkness on earth. Before and during this
+conflict with Paganism the church of God was publicly triumphant on
+earth. Afterward, during the apostasy, a false church was, in the
+public view, triumphant, while the church of God was crowded out of
+sight into the wilderness. However, the reign of God's saints did
+not cease; for when they were slaughtered by their relentless
+persecutors and deprived of their reign on earth, they were, as
+symbolized by the man-child, caught up to God and to his throne and
+there "lived and reigned with Christ" during the thousand years
+under consideration.</p>
+<p>This same thought concerning the reign of the martyrs in
+Paradise while the powers of evil triumphed on earth, was brought
+to view on the opening of the fifth seal in chapter <a href=
+"#chap6-9">6:9-11</a>. "And when he had opened the fifth seal, I
+saw under the altar the <i>souls of them that were slain</i> for
+the word of God, and for the testimony which they held: and they
+cried with a loud voice, saying, How long, O Lord, holy and true,
+dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell on the
+earth? And white robes were given unto every one of them; and it
+was said unto them, that they should rest yet for a little season,
+until their fellowservants also and their <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page393" name="page393"></a>[pg 393]</span>
+brethren, <i>that should be killed as they were</i> should be
+fulfilled." This quotation will make clear one point concerning the
+refusal of the martyrs to worship the beast and his image. We are
+not to understand that every soul of the martyrs John saw in these
+visions reigned during the entire period under consideration; but
+he beheld the reign of the saints above during the one thousand
+years, and he saw there the souls of all the martyrs&mdash;such as
+had been slain in the early days of Christianity (chap. <a href=
+"#chap12-11">12:11</a>); such as refused to worship the beast and
+were martyred therefor (chap. <a href="#chap13-7">13:7</a>); and
+also, such as "should be killed as they were" (chap. <a href=
+"#chap6-11">6:11</a>) and were put to death shortly after the
+formation of the image of the beast. Chap. <a href=
+"#chap13-15">13:15</a>; <a href="#chap16-6">16:6</a>.</p>
+<p>This company of souls that the apostle saw reigning with Christ
+above were those who had had part "in the first resurrection,"
+which had made them "blessed and holy." They were not on earth;
+they were disembodied spirits above, hence had not been literally
+resurrected. The Scriptures clearly teach that mankind in their
+ordinary condition are "<i>dead</i> in trespasses and in sins," and
+that through salvation, which makes them "blessed and holy," they
+are "quickened" to a new life in Christ. Eph. 2:1. That this is
+Scripturally "the first resurrection" is proved most positively by
+the words of Christ&mdash;"Verily, verily, I say unto you, the hour
+is coming, <i>and now is</i>, when the <i>dead</i> shall hear the
+voice of the Son of God: and they that hear <i>shall live</i>. He
+that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me,
+<i>hath</i> everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation,
+but is <i>passed from death unto life</i>." John 5:25, 24.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page394" name="page394"></a>[pg
+394]</span> Although many other proofs could easily be given, this
+of itself is sufficient to establish the point that the host of
+early Christians who had "passed from death unto life" in Christ
+and who gave their lives gladly for the sake of Christ, constituted
+the ones referred to as having had "part in the first
+resurrection." According to verse 6 it was only on those who had
+part in the first resurrection that the second death had no power.
+The church at Smyrna received the sure promise from Christ himself
+that they should "not be hurt of the second death" (chap. <a href=
+"#chap2-11">2:11</a>); and this shows beyond all question that even
+at that early date they had had part in this first resurrection
+that makes men blessed and holy.</p>
+<p>It is the trick of Beelzebub to deceive souls by causing them to
+overlook the fact that this first resurrection that made men
+blessed and holy is of a spiritual nature and to fix their hopes in
+two literal resurrections at the end. There will be but one literal
+resurrection then, as is clearly shown by the account given of the
+judgment in this chapter, verses 11-15. The writer of the
+Revelation declared positively, "Behold, he cometh with clouds: and
+<i>every eye</i> shall see him, and they also which pierced him:
+and all kindreds of the earth shall wail because of him." Chap.
+<a href="#chap1-7">1:7</a>. If this does not prove that there is
+but one literal resurrection when Christ comes, then I would not
+know how to state such a fact if I desired. Furthermore, Jesus
+himself, in the same chapter in which he described "the first
+resurrection," says most positively that all the literal dead shall
+be resurrected at the same time. "Marvel not at this," he says:
+"the <i>hour</i> is coming, in the which all that are in the graves
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page395" name="page395"></a>[pg
+395]</span> shall hear his voice, and shall come forth; they that
+have done good, unto the resurrection of life; and they that have
+done evil, unto the resurrection of damnation." John 5:28, 29. This
+<i>hour</i> certainly can not signify more than a short period of
+time. In their efforts to prove two literal resurrections,
+millenarians always quote with emphasis, "The dead in Christ shall
+rise first." 1 Thes. 4:16. In doing so they, either ignorantly or
+wilfully, wrest the Scriptures to their own destruction; for any
+one can see at a glance that no such thing as two resurrections is
+even hinted at. Verses 15-17 simply teach this, that the righteous
+who are living on the earth at the time Christ appears will not
+ascend to heaven <i>before</i> the righteous dead are resurrected,
+but the dead will rise first, then they will all be caught up
+together at one and the same time. The wicked are not mentioned in
+this connection; for, as stated, Paul was writing this only for the
+comfort and the edification of the church. In the following
+chapter, however, their "sudden destruction" at the second coming
+of Christ is mentioned as a warning to the church.</p>
+<p>It is evident that the first resurrection as applied in this
+connection specified particularly that phase of the church which,
+as symbolized by the man-child, was caught up to God through
+martyrdom and there "lived and reigned with Christ." The other
+phase of the church, symbolized by the woman, is not said to reign
+with Christ a thousand years, but, on the other hand, is
+represented as driven into the wilderness, her public reign on
+earth being ended by the holy city being trodden under foot of a
+profane multitude of apostate beast-worshipers; and the two
+witnesses, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page396" name=
+"page396"></a>[pg 396]</span> clothed in sackcloth, were
+prophesying only in a few isolated, individual hearts.</p>
+<p>A careful study of this scripture, taken in connection with
+others in the Revelation applying to the same object, will show
+that all God's people, both those here brought to view during the
+thousand years and those following that period, are spoken of as
+dead people resurrected and reigning. They are considered under two
+phases&mdash;those who, as symbolized by the man-child, were caught
+up to God through martyrdom and there lived and reigned with
+Christ; and those who, as symbolized by the woman, were deprived of
+their public reign on earth and were driven into the wilderness
+during the same period. The first phase were "priests of God and of
+Christ" and reigned with him in Paradise (chap. <a href=
+"#chap6-9">6:9-11</a>); but "the rest," the phase symbolized by the
+woman, did not live and enjoy their public reign again, as in the
+early days of Christianity, until the expiration of the
+thousand-year period. It is true that individuals on earth received
+life from God and were thus spiritually resurrected during the
+thousand-year period; but the dominant beast-power martyred them by
+thousands, the two witnesses were then in their sack-cloth state,
+and thus the public triumphal reign of the saints on earth ceased.
+The statement of verse five that "the rest of the dead lived not
+again until the thousand years were finished" should be applied not
+in an individual, but in a general sense, the same as the reign
+above during the same period is considered. There is also some
+doubt as to the authenticity of this sentence. It is not found in
+the Vatican Manuscript, which is one of the oldest in existence;
+and the Syriac Version, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page397" name=
+"page397"></a>[pg 397]</span> which has come down to us from early
+days through an entirely separate channel, does not contain it.
+However, it is evident that the phase of the church symbolized by
+the woman actually reigns triumphantly on earth after the thousand
+years is finished; for verses 7-9 of this chapter show that the
+dragon, combined with Gog and Magog, goes forth on the breadth of
+the earth to compass the camp of the saints just before the end of
+time.</p>
+<p>The fact that the reign of God's people on earth is divided into
+two distinct periods is shown also by other prophecies. In the
+seventh chapter of Daniel is recorded a vision of four great
+beasts, symbolizing the Babylonian, Medo-Persian, Grecian, and
+Roman empires. Verse 18, connected with Dan. 2:31-44, shows that
+the saints were to possess the kingdom of God before the overthrow
+of all these four kingdoms, which was actually fulfilled by Jesus
+Christ appearing during the reign of the Roman empire and planting
+the kingdom of God in the earth. See Mark 1:15; Luke 12:32; 16:16;
+Col. 1:13. Then follows a description of the rise of the Papacy,
+which was to "<i>wear out the saints of the most High</i>" for a
+time, times, and the dividing of times&mdash;three and one-half
+times, or forty-two months, or, prophetically, twelve hundred and
+sixty years. This, as before explained, reaches to the year A.D.
+1530. During this period the public reign of the saints on earth
+ceased. Then immediately following it is said, "The judgment shall
+sit, and they shall take away his dominion, to consume and to
+destroy it <i>unto the end</i>." This does not refer to the final
+judgment; it is a spiritual judgment that commences before that
+time and continues "<i>unto the end</i>." <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page398" name="page398"></a>[pg 398]</span> For
+example of a similar <i>judgment</i> see Acts 7:7.</p>
+<p>God had a people during the Protestant era who walked in all the
+light they possessed and who were filled with judgment against the
+beast-power that had worn out the saints for ages. And though in
+places some were put to death for refusing to worship the image of
+the beast that lifeless professors had set up, yet there were from
+time to time reformations that resurrected many people to life in
+Christ. A little later, however, the real spiritual reign of the
+saints is perfectly restored in the pure gospel light of the
+evening time, and now the next verse is fulfilled, which says, "And
+the kingdom and dominion, and the greatness of the kingdom under
+the whole heaven, shall be given to the people of the saints of the
+most High, whose kingdom is an everlasting kingdom." It is only
+reasonable to suppose that the public reign on earth would commence
+gradually and would finally reach its perfect fulfilment, just the
+same as it ceased gradually in the beginning. Therefore we can not
+point to a definite date exactly marking the end of the thousand
+years, any more than we can locate exactly the time of its
+commencement; but we must be satisfied just to consider this
+symbolic expression as covering a long period of time during which
+these important phases of deep truth are considered merely from a
+general standpoint.</p>
+<p>This special reign of a thousand years above is doubtless
+brought to our view for the express purpose of making the history
+of the triumph of Christianity continuous. When interrupted on
+earth, the scene is suddenly transferred to Paradise; then when the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page399" name="page399"></a>[pg
+399]</span> woman comes out of the wilderness and the public reign
+on earth begins again, while the woman is being prepared as a bride
+for the coming of the Lamb, the scene, as the following description
+in verse 9 also will show, is again transferred to earth. The reign
+above does not in reality cease with the expiration of the thousand
+years, but we are permitted to obtain a view of it only for that
+length of time during the down-trodden state of the church on
+earth. This reign of the martyrs' above is placed in direct
+contrast with the public reign on earth during the same time, which
+consisted of multitudes of people worshiping the beast, recieving
+his image and his mark. What the "thrones" on which they sat and
+the "judgment" given them signifies, I do not know for certain, but
+it is doubtless the same exalted privilege and authority which
+Christ promised to all his over-comers&mdash;to sit with him on his
+throne. Chap. <a href="#chap3-21">3:21</a>.</p>
+<a name="chap20-7" id="chap20-7"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>7. And when the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be
+loosed out of his prison,</p>
+<p>8. And shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four
+quarters of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them together to
+battle: the number of whom is as the sand of the sea.</p>
+<p>9. And they went up on the breadth of the earth, and compassed
+the camp of the saints about, and the beloved city: and fire came
+down from God out of heaven, and devoured them.</p>
+<a name="chap20-10" id="chap20-10"></a>
+<p>10. And the devil that deceived them was cast into the lake of
+fire and brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet are, and
+shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The loosing of Satan, or the dragon, is the first important
+point to be considered. Before this matter <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page400" name="page400"></a>[pg 400]</span> can be
+rightly understood, however, we must take into account carefully
+certain facts regarding his binding. It was not the dragon as a
+political power that Christianity attacked (it did not labor to
+that end), but it was its huge public system of false belief that
+was overthrown. This great system, as opposed to Christianity, can
+all be summed up under the one word <i>infidelity</i>.
+<i>Infidel</i> signifies "a heathen; one who disbelieves in Christ,
+or the divine origin and authority of Christianity."&mdash;Webster.
+This system was positively an antichristian power that sought by
+every possible means to destroy the religion of Jesus and to blot
+out his very name. It failed in the attempt. It was bound. During
+the long reign of Popery, when the doctrine was
+be-a-Catholic-or-die, infidelity could not publicly lift its head
+in the sense in which it was cast down by the early Christians. It
+had no power over the nations of the Apocalyptic earth to then
+deceive them; but they were greatly deceived by a false
+Christianity until almost all the world wondered after the beast.
+The release of the dragon, then, in order to be entirely
+satisfactory and consistent, must embrace the following points:
+First, it must at least include the development of a great public
+antichristian power whose avowed object is to destroy the whole
+fabric of Christianity. Second, being bound by divine power, his
+release must be the result of divine permission for a special
+purpose. Third, the scene of his imprisonment must necessarily be
+the place of his release; namely, the earth&mdash;the Apocalyptic
+earth&mdash;the territory of the Roman empire.</p>
+<p>We find all these requirements meeting a most perfect fulfilment
+in the events described under the <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page401" name="page401"></a>[pg 401]</span> pouring out of the
+first vial, which was done by the direction of Him that sat upon
+the throne. A sufficient history of that fearful system of
+infidelity which, through the labors of Voltaire and his
+coadjutors, spread throughout all Europe has already been given.
+The very object of the leaders of this movement was the
+extermination of the Christian religion, and their secret watchword
+was "Crush the wretch," meaning Jesus Christ. The dragon was loose
+in all his terrible features. The Pagans upheld a false belief;
+these modern worshipers of the dragon did likewise and publicly
+exalted the "Goddess of Reason" as an object of devotion, setting
+aside every tenth day for their hellish orgies in her honor. The
+former endeavored to overthrow the Christian religion; the latter
+had for its special aim the utter destruction of everything
+Christian either in name or in character. This devilish system
+spread over all Europe and almost undermined the whole fabric of
+society, and threatened to convert the world from Christianity to
+the worship of the Goddess of Reason. Its foothold gained was so
+extensive and its effects so far-reaching that prominent
+historians, D'Aubigne among the number, have denominated the period
+of its greatest triumph "the day of Reason." It is one of the three
+and one-half days covered by the prophecy in Rev. <a href=
+"#chap11-9">11:9</a>.</p>
+<p>I do not wish to be understood, however, as limiting the release
+of the dragon and his work to the system of infidelity that had its
+origin in France. I merely refer to that unfortunate system as the
+beginning of the dragon's release and work&mdash;the
+re-introduction to the world of those principles of public
+hostility to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page402" name=
+"page402"></a>[pg 402]</span> Christianity which had lain buried
+since the days of Pagan Rome. The dragon in the beginning was a
+deceptive system, one that "deceived the whole world"; but its
+deceptions were uncovered by the light of Christianity, and then it
+became the bitter public opposer of the religion of Christ. In the
+release of the dragon the order is reversed. He first appears as
+the public enemy of Christianity in the form already mentioned, but
+afterwards changes his tactics to milder methods in order the
+better to "deceive" the people, as we shall see hereafter.</p>
+<p>But there is another chapter in the history of the dragon's
+career that we must not overlook&mdash;his partnership with Gog and
+Magog. The original signification of the terms <i>Gog and Magog</i>
+is difficult to ascertain, as all known accounts are conflicting.
+The terms occur in Ezek. 38 and 39 also. In the Revelation,
+however, it is clear that these terms are applied to Romanism and
+Protestantism, and under the special leadership of this spirit of
+antichrist they are gathered together to battle against the saints
+of the most High. I will again quote the description of this union
+as given under the sixth vial, which refers to the present time:
+"And I saw three unclean spirits like frogs come out of the mouth
+of the dragon, and out of the mouth of the beast, and out of the
+mouth of the false prophet. For they are the spirits of devils,
+working miracles, which go forth unto the kings of the earth and of
+the whole world, to gather them to the battle of that great day of
+God Almighty.... And he gathered them into a place called in the
+Hebrew tongue Armageddon." Chap. <a href="#chap16-13">16:13-16</a>.
+It will be <span class="pagenum"><a id="page403" name=
+"page403"></a>[pg 403]</span> noticed that the field of operations
+under this grand confederation of the three unclean spirits is
+enlarged so that it includes not merely the Apocalyptic earth, but
+"the whole world."</p>
+<p>In order to form a confederation of powers each of which holds
+its own distinctive principles, it is necessary that each make
+certain concessions, in outward appearance at least, so that they
+can work together in harmony against a common foe. In this case it
+will be necessary that three points be conceded before the dragon,
+the beast, and the false prophet can agree. First, the dragon must
+not appear in his true character as antichristian; he must be
+clothed in some different attire in order to "deceive." Second,
+Catholicism must stop her work of slaying those who disagree with
+her and cover up her true principles. Third, Protestantism must
+cease protesting against the abominations of Catholicism. We are
+living in the time when this confederation of the powers of
+wickedness is being effected; therefore we must not expect to see
+the dragon as a terrible creature with heads and horns standing as
+the open adversary of God, but we must look for him dressed up in a
+garb "to deceive." If necessary he can place himself under a
+Christian garb without violating his conscience&mdash;of which he
+has none.</p>
+<p>It will perhaps be beneficial to give the reader a short account
+of some of the forms under which the dragon is manifesting himself
+at the present time in order to "deceive" the people. It will be
+remembered that, in the description of the first vial, which
+represented the awful system of infidelity that was spread over
+Europe, Dr. Adam Weishaupt of the University <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page404" name="page404"></a>[pg 404]</span> of
+Ingolstadt, formed a secret society under the name of the
+Illuminati in order the better to spread these wicked principles. A
+quotation was also made showing that "<i>Freemasonry</i> being in
+high repute all over Europe when Weishaupt first formed the plan of
+his society, he availed himself of its secrecy to introduce his new
+order, which rapidly spread, by the efforts of its founders and
+disciples, through all those countries." Now, if Freemasonry was
+such an excellent channel for the dragon to begin his work through,
+is it not reasonable to suppose that he would still retain his
+position in that order, and especially since <i>the very name of
+Christ</i> is barred from its rites, rules, and ceremonies? And
+this thought is especially convincing when we consider the fact
+that Freemasonry is in its very nature and constitution only a form
+of Paganism. This vast body is founded on what they call the
+"ancient mysteries." The following is taken from Masonic Salvation
+by Fred Husted:</p>
+<p>"Warburton says: 'Each of the Pagan gods had (beside the public
+and open) a secret worship paid unto him, to which none were
+admitted but those who had been selected by preparatory ceremonies
+called initiation. This secret worship was called "the
+mysteries."'</p>
+<p>"Mackey, another member of this order, says: 'These mysteries
+existed in every country of heathendom, in each under a different
+name, and to some extent under a different form, but always and
+everywhere with the same design of inculcating (teaching) by
+allegorical and symbolical teachings the great Masonic doctrines of
+the unity of God and the immortality of the soul. This one
+important proposition <span class="pagenum"><a id="page405" name=
+"page405"></a>[pg 405]</span> and the fact which it enumerates
+(states) must never be lost sight of, in any inquiry into the
+origin of Freemasonry; for the Pagan mysteries were to the spurious
+Freemasonry of antiquity precisely what the Masters' lodges are to
+the Freemasonry of the present day.'</p>
+<p>"This is certainly a frank statement, coming as it does from a
+man who is an acknowledged and highly esteemed authority in matters
+pertaining to the craft. Daniel Sickles says, 'In Egypt, Greece,
+and many other ancient nations Freemasonry, that is, the Mysteries,
+was one of the earliest agencies employed to effect the improvement
+and enlightenment of man.' Pierson says, 'The identity of the
+Masonic institutions with the ancient Mysteries is obvious,' which
+means clearly to be seen, manifest to any and all.</p>
+<p>"Masons say that the order is founded on the Bible&mdash;that
+is, unlearned Masons say so. Geo. Wingate Chase, in the Digest of
+Masonic Law, says: 'The Jews, the Turks, each reject either the New
+Testament or the Old or both, and yet we see no good reasons why
+they should not be made Masons. In fact, Blue Lodge [first three
+degrees] Masonry has nothing whatever to do with the Bible. It is
+not founded on the Bible. If it were, it would not be Masonry; it
+would be something else.'</p>
+<p>"Sickles says in speaking of the third, or Master Mason's
+degree, 'There are characters impressed upon it which can not be
+mistaken. <i>It is thoroughly Egyptian</i>.' He further says that
+the tradition is older by a thousand years than Solomon. 'That our
+[Masonic] rites embrace all the possible circumstances of man,
+moral, social, and spiritual, and have a meaning high <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page406" name="page406"></a>[pg 406]</span> as the
+heavens, broad as the universe, and profound as eternity.' Sickles
+in Gen. Chiman Rezon.</p>
+<p>"The writer was informed when the charges were given him 'that
+our ancient brethren worshiped in high hills and in low vales, and
+that guards were placed to keep off cowans or eves-droppers.' By
+referring to Scripture we at once find the character of those who
+worshiped in high hills and low vales, and why they needed a guard
+to keep off eves-droppers. 'Thou saidst, I will not transgress;
+when upon every high hill and under every green tree thou
+wanderest, playing the harlot.' Jer. 2:20; 3:6. 'Ye shall utterly
+destroy all the places, wherein the nations which ye shall possess
+served other gods, upon the high mountains, and upon the hills, and
+under every green tree.' Deut. 12:2. 'Enflaming themselves with
+idols under every green tree, slaying the children in the vales
+under the clifts of the rocks.... Even thither wentest thou up to
+offer sacrifice.' Isa. 57:5-7. They were not afraid of Ahab and
+Jezebel (2 Kings 7:10; 1 Kings 14:23), and they grew and multiplied
+in their reigns, and in the reigns of all those of whom it is
+recorded that 'they did that which was evil in the sight of the
+Lord.' Some of the kings of Israel and of Judah destroyed their
+high places for them and were highly favored of God for so
+doing.</p>
+<p>"Again, 'The precepts of Jesus could not have been made
+obligatory upon a Jew. A Christian would have denied the sanction
+of the Koran. A Mohammedan must have rejected the law of Moses, and
+a disciple of Zoroaster would have turned from all, to the teaching
+of his Zend-Avesta. The universal law of nature, which the authors
+of the old charges have <span class="pagenum"><a id="page407" name=
+"page407"></a>[pg 407]</span> properly called the moral, is
+therefore the <i>only law</i> suited in every respect to be adopted
+as the Masonic code.' Mackeys' Textbook, Masonic Jurisprudence. If
+the statements just quoted do not place the secret society of
+Masonry on a footing decidedly Pagan, it is difficult to say just
+where it does stand....</p>
+<p>"Tammuz, or Osiris of Egypt, who is declared to be the original
+of Hiram Abiff the temple-builder, is still mourned for. Ezek.
+8:14. See Young's Analytical Concordance or any standard Greek
+Mythology. Now see Piersons' Traditions of Freemasonry. 'The
+Masonic legend stands by itself, unsupported by history, or other
+than its own traditions. Yet we readily recognize in Hiram Abiff
+the Osiris of the Egyptians, the Mithras of the Persians, the
+Bacchus of the Greeks [god of drunkenness, or feasts and the like],
+the Dionysis of the fraternity of artificers, and the Atys of the
+Phrygians, whose passions, deaths, and resurrections were
+celebrated by these people respectively.' Thus it is clearly shown
+that each of these ancient nations had its counterfeit Savior and
+Redeemer, and it is here proved by the words of Masonic Grand
+Masters, authors, and authorities, that Masonry is of Pagan
+origin."</p>
+<p>When we think of the millions of devotees of this form of
+Paganism, multitudes of church-members and preachers, surely it is
+not difficult to see that the dragon is loose in deceiving power
+again. That he is meeting with great success in forming his
+confederation of all false religions, is obvious. The world's
+Parliament of Religions, held in Chicago in the year 1893, is an
+illustration of this statement. The dragon, the beast, and the
+false prophet met in "mutual confidence <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page408" name="page408"></a>[pg 408]</span> and
+respect," a "brotherhood" of religions. Theism, Judaism,
+Mohammedanism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, Shintoism,
+Zoroastrianism, Catholicism, the Greek Church, and Protestantism in
+many forms&mdash;all these were represented. And the devotees of
+these religions met, as they said, "To unite all religion against
+all irreligion; to make the golden rule the basis of this union;
+and to present to the world <i>substantial unity of many
+religions</i>." The following are a few extracts from addresses
+made before the Parliament.</p>
+<p>President Charles Carroll Bonney, in the opening address, said:
+"Worshipers of God and lovers of man: Let us rejoice that we have
+lived to see this glorious day.... That we are permitted to take
+part in this solemn and majestic event of a World's Congress of
+Religions. The importance of this event can not be overestimated.
+Its influence on the future relations of the various races of men,
+can not be too highly esteemed. If this Congress shall faithfully
+execute its duties with which it has been charged, it shall become
+the joy of the whole earth, and stand in human history like a
+<i>new Mount Zion</i>, crowned with glory, and marking the actual
+beginning of a <i>new epoch of brotherhood</i> and peace. <i>For
+when the religious faiths of the world recognize each other as
+brothers, children of one Father</i>, whom all profess to love and
+serve, then, and not until then, will the nations of the earth
+yield to the spirit of concord and learn war no more.... We meet on
+the mountain height of absolute respect for the religious
+convictions of each other.... This day the sun of a new era of
+religious peace and progress arises over the world, dispelling the
+dark <span class="pagenum"><a id="page409" name="page409"></a>[pg
+409]</span> clouds of sectarian strife. <i>It is the brotherhood of
+religions.</i>"</p>
+<p>Chairman John Henry Barrows, in his address, said: "We are here
+not as Baptists and Buddhists, Catholics and Confucians, Parsees
+and Presbyterians, Methodists and Moslems; we are here as members
+of a Parliament of Religions, over which flies no sectarian flag,
+... but where for the first time in large council is lifted up the
+banner of love, fellowship, brotherhood.... Welcome, one and all,
+thrice welcome to the world's first Parliament of Religions!
+Welcome to the men and women of Israel, the standing miracle of
+nations and religions! Welcome to the disciples of Prince
+Siddartha, the many millions who worship their lord Buddha as the
+light of Asia! Welcome to the high-priests of the national religion
+of Japan! This city has every reason to be grateful to the
+enlightened ruler of 'the sunrise kingdom.' Welcome to the men of
+India, and all faiths! Welcome to all the disciples of Christ! ...
+It seems to me that the spirits of just and good men hover over
+this assembly. I believe the spirit of Paul is here. I believe the
+spirit of the wise and humane Buddha is here, and of Socrates the
+searcher after truth.... When a few days ago I met for the first
+time the delegates who have come to us from Japan, and shortly
+after the delegates who have come to us from India, I felt that the
+arms of human brotherhood had reached almost around the globe."
+World's Parliament of Religions, Chap. III. Similar congresses have
+since been held. While I never expect to see all these principles
+of evil under one organized form, yet it is evident that the
+spirits of devils that have <span class="pagenum"><a id="page410"
+name="page410"></a>[pg 410]</span> gone forth into "all the world"
+are uniting them all under one <i>spirit</i>&mdash;that of
+Antichrist.</p>
+<p>Another form in which the old dragon is manifesting himself and
+uniting thousands of people against the truth, and one in which the
+"miracles" ascribed to this latest confederation of Satan are
+performed, is that of "Christian Science." Attracted by its healing
+doctrine, multitudes are lured into this deceptive communion of
+Mrs. Eddy's. At the very best her system is, as every historian
+knows, only a slight revision of the Oriental Philosophy; and
+notwithstanding its forged name <i>Christian</i>, it is truly
+subversive of the doctrine of Christ. Her grand central doctrine of
+the "allness" of mind and the unreality of matter is a true copy of
+the "fantastic idealism" of the Gnostics. Gnosticism was based on
+"speculative knowledge." So is Mrs. Eddy's theory. Gnosticism
+denied the "<i>true humanity</i> of the Redeemer, and made his
+person a mere phantom, and his work a mere illusion." So does
+Christian Science. Although Mrs. Eddy clamours loudly that her work
+is <i>Christian</i> and her multitude of followers believe her
+claim, still a careful study of her work Science and Health will
+convince any unprejudiced person that she utterly repudiates the
+atonement-work of Jesus Christ by denying his person and the
+reality of sin and matter. Though the system may contain some good
+moral principles, yet it has no power to save men from sin, since
+it denies the existence of actual sin. Her denial of the one
+personal God&mdash;"all is infinite mind, and its infinite
+manifestations,"&mdash;is but a swing of the pendulum from the
+godless and graceless system of the materialistic philosophy
+propounded by <span class="pagenum"><a id="page411" name=
+"page411"></a>[pg 411]</span> Darwin and Haeckel and is as absurd
+and unscriptural (although opposite) as the rankest Pantheism.</p>
+<p>The salvation of the soul through faith in Jesus Christ has
+absolutely no place in the Christian Science creed. It is nothing
+but a species of universalism. Individuals of every evil class and
+character&mdash;self-lovers, covetous, boasters, proud,
+blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, without
+natural affection, trucebreakers, false accusers, incontinent,
+fierce, despisers of those that are good, traitors, heady,
+highminded, lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God, profane,
+murderers of fathers and mothers, man-slayers, whoremongers, liars,
+drunkards, sorcerers, perjured persons, backbiters, haters of God,
+despiteful, inventors of evil things, implacable, unmerciful,
+abominable, and those unto every good work reprobate&mdash;any and
+all of these characters can and do come to the healers of Christian
+Science, and <i>not one word is said to them about getting
+salvation</i> through repentance and living faith in the Savior;
+but, on the other hand, they are received as follows: "As
+<i>children of God</i> you have a right to the healing of your
+bodies"! The dragon is in it! I warn people to beware. "They are
+the spirits of devils, working miracles," and form an important
+proof that we are near the end of time.</p>
+<p>Another form in which the dragon is manifesting his power on the
+deceptive and miracle-working line is modern Spiritualism.
+Multitudes of people of all classes are believers in this
+soul-destroying doctrine. The system is generally acknowledged to
+be but a modern form of what was anciently styled witchcraft,
+necromancy, magic, etc., while the mediums of to-day <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page412" name="page412"></a>[pg 412]</span> are of
+the same class as those formerly known as "witches," "sorcerers,"
+"magicians." This they themselves often admit. The system is so
+well known both in doctrine and in its pernicious effects that I
+will not devote further space to the matter.<a id="footnotetag15"
+name="footnotetag15"></a><a href="#footnote15"><sup>15</sup></a> In
+many other forms the dragon is working his deceptions upon the
+people.</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote15" name=
+"footnote15"></a><b>Footnote 15:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag15">(return)</a>
+<p>For further consideration of this subject read the book "Modern
+Spiritualism Exposed," by the publishers of this work.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Millions of church-members and thousands of preachers are
+numbered among these antichristian organizations of Freemasonry,
+Christian Science, Spiritualism, etc., etc., gathered together
+under the influence of the spirits of devils working miracles,
+mighty signs, and wonders. On the other hand, the churches are
+filled with persons who in spirit are nothing but skeptics and
+infidels. Said T. De Witt Talmage on one occasion, "There is a
+mighty host in the Christian church, positively professing
+Christianity, who <i>do not believe the Bible</i>, out and out, in
+and in, from the first word of the first verse of the first chapter
+of the Book of Genesis, down to the last word of the last verse of
+the last chapter of the Book of Revelation." Is it any wonder that
+such is the case when a large number of the preachers themselves
+are in reality skeptics? A newspaper clipping before me contains
+the following, uttered on March 28, 1905, by the Rev. B.A. Green,
+pastor of the First Baptist Church, of Evanstown, Ill., before
+about a hundred of his fellow ministers: "All the truth in the
+world is not contained in one book, nor in books of theology, God
+was too big for one temple and he is also too big <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page413" name="page413"></a>[pg 413]</span> for
+one book. God is everywhere. His truth is found in all good books.
+The pastor of to-day should read the modern psychology and modern
+literature, <i>especially the works of fiction</i> which deal with
+religious or social phases of modern life." A large portion of the
+sectarian ministry reject entirely the Mosaic account of the
+creation, and accept instead the modern theory of evolution.</p>
+<p>The following quotation is from the Rev. Minton J. Savage,
+pastor of the Church of the Messiah, New York, N.Y., who is an
+acknowledged leader in the "higher criticism." This was in answer
+to an attack made on the higher critics by a convention of the
+American Bible League.</p>
+<p>"The men who are leading in the higher criticism of the Bible
+and who are now being assailed so bitterly by the American Bible
+League, are representative scholars of the world, scientific
+thinkers, leaders, teachers, who have given us a new universe, a
+new conception of God, a new idea concerning the origin and nature
+of man. They are not seeking to support or to undermine anything.
+They are seeking for the truth as the only sacred thing on
+earth.</p>
+<p>"I would like to consider what this book is about over which all
+this controversy is raging. It is really not one book, but
+sixty-six small volumes. They were written during a period of
+nearly a thousand years, in different countries, by different
+people. The first book was written about eight hundred years before
+Christ. The first five books of the Bible were written between five
+and six hundred years before Christ. The historical books tell us
+about the day of Judges, then <span class="pagenum"><a id="page414"
+name="page414"></a>[pg 414]</span> of Kings, the wars of Israel,
+until the time of captivity. Then the book of Job, purely
+anonymous, and no one knows who wrote it. Then the book of the
+Psalms, the hymn-book of the people of Israel, and the books of the
+prophets. It would be more proper to call them preachers, for they
+make no effort to foretell anything, but merely told the people
+that if they followed certain lines of conduct certain things would
+happen.</p>
+<p>"No book was placed in the Bible by anything that claimed to be
+divine authority. No law concerning the Biblical canon was ever
+issued by the church earlier than the sixteenth century and that
+changed nothing; it simply recognized what had come to be a fact.
+These books drifted together and came to be bound as one, by force
+of gravity, by common consent, and there are one or two books in
+the New Testament which scholars could miss without feeling any the
+poorer.</p>
+<p>"Nobody, then, is assaulting the Bible, for the simple reason
+that the Bible as such has never made any claim. The Bible does not
+claim to be inspired; it does not claim to be infallible. No writer
+of one book is authorized to speak for the author of any other
+book. One verse is sometimes referred to as meaning something. The
+writer of the last book in the Bible utters a curse against anybody
+who should presume to add to or take from the words of that book.
+He does not say that the book is infallible; he simple curses
+anybody that interferes with it, as Shakespeare uttered a curse
+against anybody who interfered with his bones. I suppose that God
+might have given us an <span class="pagenum"><a id="page415" name=
+"page415"></a>[pg 415]</span> infallible book, if he had chosen,
+and if he had given us such a book he would have made us sure that
+it was infallible."</p>
+<p>"If I were compelled to believe that God holds me responsible
+for Adam's sin and that the immense majority of the world is doomed
+to everlasting torment, and that only a selected few here and there
+are to enter eternal felicity, I might bow my head and accept it,
+but I could not rejoice in it. It is barbarous. Men who try to make
+us accept such dogmas are the real infidels of the world, and it is
+infidelity which they are creating&mdash;infidelity a hundred times
+worse than that which they call by the name. If you would blot out
+every Bible in the world to-day you would not even endanger its
+life, nor would you destroy religion." From <i>The Toledo
+News-Bee</i>, May 14, 1904.</p>
+<p>All these allied powers of wickedness in conflict with the few
+of God's saints who serve him acceptably, constitute the battle of
+Armageddon&mdash;that battle of the last great day. It is not a
+literal collecting of armies nor a literal conflict, but a fierce
+battle between truth and error. The outward indications are that
+the enemies of God will triumph; but let us remember that it is
+destined to "end in the victory of Him unto whom triumph belongs."
+Fire will come down from God out of heaven and devour them. This
+symbol is doubtless taken from the circumstance of Elijah where he
+commanded fire to come down and destroy his enemies; and it will be
+as with such an overthrow that the powers of wickedness shall meet
+their doom in that last great day of God Almighty.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page416" name="page416"></a>[pg
+416]</span> <a name="chap20-11" id="chap20-11"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>11. And I saw a great white throne, and him that sat on it, from
+whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was found
+no place for them.</p>
+<p>12. And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; and
+the books were opened; and another book was opened, which is the
+book of life: and the dead were judged out of those things which
+were written in the books, according to their works.</p>
+<p>13. And the sea gave up the dead which were in it; and death and
+hell delivered up the dead which were in them: and they were judged
+every man according to their works.</p>
+<p>14. And death and hell were cast, into the lake of fire. This is
+the second death.</p>
+<p>15. And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was
+cast into the lake of fire.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This series of events, as far as it pertains to the doom of evil
+men, ends properly with verse 10, where the combined powers of
+wickedness are represented as being cast into the lake of fire.
+This last event, however, is in the present scene more fully
+described. It is fitting that the judgment scene should be more
+fully described; for with this chapter we have the last special
+history of the powers of evil given. Many times we have been led up
+to the time of the final overthrow of all the powers of wickedness,
+but the manner in which that great event occurs has not been
+perfectly detailed.</p>
+<p>Here we have another illustration of that principle of symbolic
+language laid down in the beginning&mdash;that objects and events
+whose nature forbids their symbolization appear under their own
+names or titles and their description must of necessity be literal.
+The <span class="pagenum"><a id="page417" name="page417"></a>[pg
+417]</span> appearance of the great God must be considered an
+actual event; for, as clearly shown, he can not be symbolized,
+neither can he appear as the symbol of some other object, from the
+fact that there is no other object of analagous nature of which he
+could stand as the representative. The resurrection of itself is an
+event of such a peculiar nature as to forbid its symbolization.
+What is there analagous to it which could here be employed? There
+are, perhaps, analagous changes in the vegetable and animal
+kingdoms; but symbols drawn from that quarter would indicate some
+political change instead. Paul may, indeed, speak of the decay and
+the growth of seeds to <i>illustrate</i> the resurrection; but the
+decay of a seed does not <i>symbolize</i> the death of a saint,
+neither does its germination <i>symbolize</i> his resurrection. Nor
+is there any change that can do it. There is the same necessity of
+speaking of the resurrection in its literal meaning as there was of
+representing the spirits of the martyrs under their own appropriate
+titles.</p>
+<p>The earth and the heaven fleeing away from before God's presence
+so that no place is found for them, must be understood as
+describing the literal dissolution of this world when Christ comes;
+for it is clear from the Scriptures that such an event will occur
+at that time. Peter says that "the day of the Lord will come as a
+thief in the night; in the which <i>the heavens shall pass away</i>
+with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat,
+<i>the earth also</i> and the works that are therein <i>shall be
+burned up</i>." 2 Pet. 3:10. Nothing can be found to symbolize
+perfectly such a mighty event; hence it appears as a literal
+description of the final catastrophe of this old world.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page418" name="page418"></a>[pg
+418]</span>
+<p>It is evident that there are symbols connected with this
+appearance of God, as truly as there were symbols connected with
+Christ in his appearance in chap. 19. The <i>throne</i> is a symbol
+of judgment and of supreme sovereignty, its dazzling whiteness
+indicating the impartiality and justice of the proceedings. The
+<i>books</i>, likewise, are symbols. We are not to suppose that
+there are literal books in heaven, in which Christ or some angelic
+secretary notes down all the affairs of earth. The language and the
+symbols of Scripture are accommodated to the human understanding,
+hence books are used as a symbol to denote that the character and
+the actions of men are all as perfectly known and remembered as if
+they had been recorded in the archives of heaven. The <i>book of
+life</i>, in which the names of the faithful are often said to be
+inscribed, denotes that God knows all his chosen people. In the
+following chapter it is called the Lamb's book of life.</p>
+<p>This scene, then, as a whole, is a sublime description of the
+resurrection and the final judgment of all men and the dissolution
+of the earth on which we now live. That the righteous will be
+judged at this time is shown by the fact that the book of life, in
+which the names of the righteous only are recorded (Chap. <a href=
+"#chap21-27">21:27</a>; Exod. 32:33), will also be opened; and
+verse fifteen implies that the names of some during this judgment
+scene were found recorded in that book. The wicked receive their
+eternal portion by being cast into the lake of fire; while the
+reward of the righteous is described in the remaining part of this
+series, contained in the two following chapters.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page419" name="page419"></a>[pg
+419]</span> <a name="chap21" id="chap21"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
+<a name="chap21-1" id="chap21-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And I saw a new heaven and a new earth: for the first heaven and
+the first earth were passed away; and there was no more sea.</p>
+<p>2. And I John saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from
+God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband.</p>
+<p>3. And I heard a great voice out of heaven saying, Behold, the
+tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and
+they shall be his people, and God himself shall be with them, and
+be their God.</p>
+<p>4. And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there
+shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall
+there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The events of this chapter are a continuation of the series of
+prophecy considered in the preceding one, only describing an
+entirely different phase&mdash;the final reward and eternal home of
+God's people. We have traced many series of prophecies through the
+long weary pathway of centuries, only to find the termination of
+the powers of wickedness in the lake of fire at the end of time or
+their overthrow otherwise set forth under appropriate symbols; but
+in no instance has the final reward of God's people after the
+judgment been fully described. That glorious event of the future
+was referred to in <a href="#chap7">chap. 7</a> as the final
+in-gathering of the redeemed "of all nations, and kindreds, and
+people, and tongues." The description however, was incomplete.
+Since the eternal abode <span class="pagenum"><a id="page420" name=
+"page420"></a>[pg 420]</span> of the wicked is referred to often,
+the subject would seem incomplete without a description of the
+final glories and triumphs of the redeemed in their future and
+eternal home. Though their earthly pilgrimage is fraught with
+sorrow, death, pain, wretchedness, and misery, by the hands of
+their violent oppressors, yet they shall witness the complete
+overthrow of all their enemies in the lake that burns with fire and
+brimstone, and they themselves shall be rewarded eternally; for
+"God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be
+no more death, neither sorrow, neither crying, neither shall there
+be any more pain; for the former things are passed away." It is
+fitting that such a sublime theme should be reserved as the grand
+climax of the book of Revelation.</p>
+<p>With the dissolution of the earth on which we live, which event
+has just been described, it is evident that the many lines of
+prophecy leading up to that great event are no longer under special
+consideration, but that a new theme subsequent to the judgment
+scene is introduced with the words of the Revelator immediately
+following&mdash;"I saw <i>a new heaven and a new earth:</i> for the
+first heaven and the first earth were passed away; and there was no
+more sea." The heaven, earth, and sea that passed away certainly
+refers to the earth that now is and to the aerial heaven
+surrounding it; therefore the new heaven and the new earth brought
+to view must signify the future and eternal home that Jesus went to
+prepare. We could not consistently make the one literal and the
+other symbolical. This accords perfectly with the teaching of the
+apostle Peter where he says: "The day of the Lord will come as a
+thief in the night; in the which the <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page421" name="page421"></a>[pg 421]</span> heavens shall pass
+away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent
+heat, the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burned
+up.... Nevertheless we, according to his promise, look for <i>new
+heavens and a new earth</i>, wherein dwelleth righteousness." 2
+Pet. 3:10-13.</p>
+<p>The holy city of God, the New Jerusalem, is next introduced.
+Since this meets its fulfilment in the new order of things
+subsequent to the judgment scene, it must have special reference to
+the future abode of the saints in the new earth. Many of the
+symbols here describing the New Jerusalem, and even New Jerusalem
+itself, are often used to set forth the church of God in the New
+Testament dispensation. The church on earth and the church of God
+in heaven are in one important sense the same thing, as they
+constitute but one family (Eph. 3:15); yet in another sense there
+is a difference, and the proper distinction must be observed even
+when the same symbols or titles are used to describe or designate
+both phases. A similar two-foldness is seen in many lines of truth.
+In Heb. 12:22, 23, we are represented as dwelling in the city of
+God in this dispensation; yet verse 27 of this chapter and the
+fourteenth of the following chapter plainly show our entrance into
+the city at the end. The Scriptures represent God as dwelling on
+earth in his church, which, of course, is considered in a spiritual
+sense; but his actual throne and place of abode is in heaven. A new
+creation brought about by Christ in his first advent is set forth
+by various texts; still, it remains a fact that a new creation will
+actually be brought to view after the present world is no more and
+that the same will be our eternal <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page422" name="page422"></a>[pg 422]</span> home. We obtain
+spiritual life through Christ now, hence have right to the tree of
+life; yet in another sense our access to the tree of life is at the
+end and we then enter in through the gates into the city. Chap.
+<a href="#chap22-14">22:14</a>. Hence it is proper to speak of the
+city of God as both present and future, by observing the proper
+distinction, just as the Scriptures speak of the church in a
+twofold sense as being both on earth and in heaven, or of the
+spiritual kingdom in the present and the eternal kingdom in the
+end. It is Scriptural to speak of God's throne as being on earth in
+the midst of his saints in a spiritual sense and also of its being
+located in heaven. The tree of life is a present realization
+spiritually and also a future reality. We dwell in the city of God
+now&mdash;in the suburbs, as it were&mdash;but we shall "have a
+right" to it in the future state when we are ushered into the very
+heart of the great metropolis and stand before the actual throne of
+the Deity, in the presence of his August Majesty.</p>
+<p>In the New Testament dispensation the heavenly elements of the
+New Jerusalem have descended to earth in the form of the new
+covenant, and God's people obtain a foretaste of heaven's glory and
+are made pure even as Christ is pure, and are therefore represented
+as having "come unto Mount Sion, and unto the city of the living
+God, the heavenly Jerusalem" (Heb. 12:22, 23); and God dwells with
+them in a very important sense. 2 Cor. 6:16. They are one with the
+redeemed above, and together they constitute one "family in heaven
+and earth," all loving the same Father, adoring the same King,
+drinking from the same fountain of life eternal, and all basking in
+the same divine light that beams from the throne of God.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page423" name="page423"></a>[pg
+423]</span> In another sense, however, there is a difference
+between them; for they are separated by the line of mortality, one
+phase being located on earth and the other in heaven. But when at
+the last day the redeemed of earth have access to the tree of life
+in its perfect sense, there will be henceforth only one phase to
+the New Jerusalem, or church of God, which will be in its relation
+to the new earth, as specially described in the prophecy under
+consideration, when "<i>all things</i>" are made new and "the
+former things are passed away."</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>5. And he that sat upon the throne said, Behold, I make all
+things new. And he said unto me, Write: for these words are true
+and faithful.</p>
+<p>6. And he said unto me, It is done. I am Alpha and Omega, the
+beginning and the end. I will give unto him that is athirst of the
+fountain of the water of life freely.</p>
+<p>7. He that overcometh shall inherit all things; and I will be
+his God, and he shall be my son.</p>
+<p>8. But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and
+murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all
+liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire
+and brimstone: which is the second death.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The declarations contained in these verses proceed from God
+himself and announce the fact that he hath now fulfilled all that
+he designed. His promises to his faithful children are brought to
+pass, as well as his threatening to his foes. All things are made
+new and the former things are passed away. Not only has the strife,
+the commotion, and the sin in the old order of things passed away,
+but the new creation, wherein dwelleth righteousness, has been
+introduced, the grand <span class="pagenum"><a id="page424" name=
+"page424"></a>[pg 424]</span> long-looked-for era of eternal
+blessedness to the saints. Oh, halleluiah! "And he said unto me,
+Write: for these words are true and faithful."</p>
+<p>"And he said unto me, It is done. I am Alpha and Omega, the
+beginning and the end." When the seventh angel of chap. <a href=
+"#chap16-17">16:17</a> poured out his vial, the voice of God from
+the throne said, "It is done," signifying that the last judgments
+were complete. Here again the same voice is heard as before,
+referring to the same thing&mdash;the accomplishment of God's great
+purposes. The enemies of the church have been overthrown, her long
+period of warfare has ended, and the eternal day of Zion's glory
+has come. Then follow his blessed promises held out to the
+faithful, and also the reward to the wicked. These are to be
+understood as referring to these classes, not at the day of
+judgment, but when the Revelation was given to John and therefore
+to us. "I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain of the
+water of life freely. He that overcometh shall inherit all things
+[in the margin, <i>these things</i>]: and I will be his God, and he
+shall be my son." "This is the reward in reserve for those who
+endure through this period of trial and overcome at last. They
+shall drink of living waters, which will be sweet and refreshing
+indeed to those who have toiled through this fight; and they shall
+inherit these things&mdash;these new heavens and earth. God shall
+be their God, and they his sons. Oh, what an honor! what a destiny
+in reserve for the faithful! with what glorious anticipations may
+the believer look forward to the revelations of that day, and with
+Paul say, 'If by any means I may attain unto the resurrection of
+the dead.'</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page425" name="page425"></a>[pg
+425]</span>
+<p>"What warning also to the wicked! The same voice that utters the
+promise, pronounces also the threatening. 'The fearful, and
+unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers,
+and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part
+in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the
+second death.' God says, 'These words are true and faithful.' They
+came from him who sat upon the throne, the Alpha and Omega. He has
+put his everlasting seal to them, and pledged his veracity to their
+truth." Dear reader, will you accept the word of Him who can not
+lie and choose to suffer affliction with the people of God until
+our Lord shall come to call his ransomed home? Or will you decide
+to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season, only to be resurrected
+at the last great day to "shame and everlasting contempt"? There is
+no intimation of future salvation for the transgressor. The lake of
+fire still stands as the symbol of eternal destruction, and into it
+the fearful and unbelieving and wicked of every name are cast.</p>
+<a name="chap21-9" id="chap21-9"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>9. And there came unto me one of the seven angels which had the
+seven vials full of the seven last plagues, and talked with me,
+saying, Come hither, I will show thee the bride, the Lamb's
+wife.</p>
+<p>10. And he carried me away in the spirit to a great and high
+mountain, and showed me that great city, the holy Jerusalem,
+descending out of heaven from God,</p>
+<a name="chap21-11" id="chap21-11"></a>
+<p>11. Having the glory of God: and her light was like unto a stone
+most precious, even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal;</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page426" name="page426"></a>[pg
+426]</span> <a name="chap21-12" id="chap21-12"></a>
+<p>12. And had a wall great and high, and had twelve gates, and at
+the gates twelve angels, and names written thereon, which are the
+names of the twelve tribes of the children of Israel:</p>
+<p>13. On the east three gates; on the north three gates; on the
+south three gates; and on the west three gates.</p>
+<a name="chap21-14" id="chap21-14"></a>
+<p>14. And the wall of the city had twelve foundations, and in them
+the names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb.</p>
+<p>15. And he that talked with me had a golden reed to measure the
+city, and the gates thereof, and the wall thereof.</p>
+<p>16. And the city lieth foursquare, and the length is as large as
+the breadth: and he measured the city with the reed, twelve
+thousand furlongs. The length and the breadth and the height of it
+are equal.</p>
+<p>17. And he measured the wall thereof, an hundred and forty and
+four cubits, according to the measure of a man, that is, of the
+angel.</p>
+<p>18. And the building of the wall of it was of jasper: and the
+city was pure gold, like unto clear glass.</p>
+<p>19. And the foundations of the wall of the city were garnished
+with all manner of precious stones. The first foundation was
+jasper; the second, sapphire; the third, a chalcedony; the fourth,
+an emerald;</p>
+<p>20. The fifth, sardonyx; the sixth, sardius; the seventh,
+chrysolyte; the eighth, beryl; the ninth, a topaz; the tenth, a
+chrysoprasus; the eleventh, a jacinth; the twelfth, an
+amethyst.</p>
+<p>21. And the twelve gates were twelve pearls; every several gate
+was of one pearl: and the street of the city was pure gold, as it
+were transparent glass.</p>
+<a name="chap21-22" id="chap21-22"></a>
+<p>22. And I saw no temple therein: for the Lord God Almighty and
+the Lamb are the temple of it.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page427" name="page427"></a>[pg
+427]</span>
+<p>23. And the city had no need of the sun, neither of the moon, to
+shine in it: for the glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb is
+the light thereof.</p>
+<p>24. And the nations of them which are saved shall walk in the
+light of it: and the kings of the earth do bring their glory and
+honor into it.</p>
+<p>25. And the gates of it shall not be shut at all by day: for
+there shall be no night there.</p>
+<p>26. And they shall bring the glory and honor of the nations into
+it.</p>
+<a name="chap21-27" id="chap21-27"></a>
+<p>27. And there shall in no wise enter into it any thing that
+defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination, or maketh a lie:
+but they which are written in the Lamb's book of life.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>We have here a magnificent description of the New Jerusalem,
+representing the home of the redeemed. The various symbols employed
+in its description must of course he understood as symbolical. We
+have no means of knowing just what our future home will be like;
+but that it will be a place of wondrous beauty and transcendent
+glory is shown by the fact that everything which is considered
+grand and glorious in this world is here chosen to represent the
+home of the redeemed. The symbols selected to describe it are
+objects of such priceless worth, even exceeding royal splendor,
+that we pause in astonishment and exclaim, "What must the reality
+be?" The conditions upon which entrance to this city may be
+obtained (ver. 27; chap. <a href="#chap22-14">22:14</a>) show
+clearly that our future and eternal home is the chief burden of
+this vision and not merely our spiritual inheritance in this
+world.</p>
+<p>"In approaching Jerusalem, the traveller is not aware of its
+proximity, until, ascending an eminence, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page428" name="page428"></a>[pg 428]</span> the
+glorious city bursts upon his astonished vision, when he is ready
+to exclaim with the Psalmist&mdash;'Beautiful for situation, the
+joy of the whole earth is Mount Zion, on the sides of the north,
+the city of the great king.'" Psa. 48:2. John was carried to "a
+great and high mountain," from which commanding point of view he
+was enabled to survey in all its boundless extent the surpassing
+glories of the New Jerusalem. Never did imagination conceive
+anything approaching the sublimity and grandeur of the scene here
+described by the pen of inspiration. It was "a great
+city"&mdash;how great we shall soon discover&mdash;the <i>holy</i>
+Jerusalem, descending out of heaven from God.</p>
+<p>The ancient city of Jerusalem was regarded as sacred because in
+it God had recorded his name, and it contained his holy temple, his
+place of residence on earth. Thither the tribes of Israel went up
+to worship; "Jerusalem is the place where men ought to worship."
+So, also, this New Jerusalem was "<i>the holy city</i>," an
+antitype of the former. It is described as "having the glory of
+God, and her light was like unto a stone most precious, even like a
+jasper stone, clear as crystal." "The glory of God" was that
+visible manifestation, called the Shekinah, which Jehovah made of
+himself in the tabernacle of his ancient people. The following
+facts concerning it will give us an understanding of its
+signification as connected with the New Jerusalem:</p>
+<p>"Jehovah was the accepted King and Lawgiver of his people
+Israel, and he had his tabernacle among them, where he abode by his
+presence, where he might be approached and consulted, and make
+communications <span class="pagenum"><a id="page429" name=
+"page429"></a>[pg 429]</span> of his will. That visible presence
+was 'the glory of God' or the Shekinah; and the Jews regarded it
+with the highest possible veneration, as the embodiment of the
+Deity. The sacred writers often speak of it in the same terms as of
+Jehovah himself. They refer to this when they speak of <i>seeing
+God</i>. 'Then went up Moses and Aaron, Nadab and Abihu, and
+seventy of the elders of Israel, <i>and they saw the God of
+Israel</i>.' Ex. 24:9, 10. 'I saw also the Lord sitting upon a
+throne, high and lifted up, and his train filled the temple.' Isa.
+6:1. And again in verse 5: 'For mine eyes <i>have seen</i> the
+King, the Lord of hosts.' The spiritual essence of God can not, of
+course, be revealed to mortal vision, yet there was a manifestation
+of the Deity which was made visible to the eyes of men, and which
+Moses and Isaiah speak of as <i>seeing God</i>. It is spoken of as
+the <i>presence</i> and <i>face</i> of Jehovah. 'And he said, <i>My
+presence</i> shall go with thee, and I will give thee rest.' Ex.
+33:14. 'And the Lord spake unto Moses <i>face to face</i>, as a man
+speaketh unto his friend.' Ex. 33:11."</p>
+<p>The New Jerusalem that John saw descending from God&mdash;which
+denotes its heavenly origin&mdash;had "the glory of God: and her
+light was like unto a stone most precious, even like a jasper
+stone, clear as crystal." It dazzled as the purest diamond. In
+verse 23 we are informed that it illuminated the whole city so that
+there was "no need of the sun, neither of the moon, to shine in it:
+for the <i>glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb is the light
+thereof</i>." In ancient times "the glory of God" filled the
+<i>tabernacle</i>, the place of his abode; but here it filled
+<i>the whole city</i>. In that tabernacle the Shekinah was the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page430" name="page430"></a>[pg
+430]</span> manifestation of the divine glory of Jehovah. In the
+New Jerusalem Jesus Christ, who is "the brightness of his glory,
+and the express image of his person," illuminates the entire city
+of God. Oh, halleluiah!</p>
+<p>In olden times the cities were surrounded with walls, designed
+as a defense against all enemies. The more important the city, the
+higher and stronger were the walls built. Having walls, it was
+necessary also to have gates to furnish ingress and egress to the
+inhabitants. These gates were in charge of faithful guardians, who
+had authority to open and to close them according to the
+regulations of the city. In accordance with this idea the city of
+God is represented as having "a wall great and high." This wall
+represents the security of Zion, whose inhabitants within can rest
+in peace and safety. The three gates on each side represent the
+free and easy access into the city from every quarter. Anciently,
+it was customary to give names to the gates of a city, just as we
+now do to our streets. The gates of this holy city were named after
+the twelve tribes of the children of Israel, which embraced all
+God's ancient covenant people, and which denotes the perfection and
+completeness of our heavenly home as including all the spiritual
+Israel.</p>
+<p>"And the wall of the city had twelve foundations, and in them
+the names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb." The twelve
+foundations, or rather the twelve courses of stone in the
+foundation, are more fully described hereafter. The names of the
+twelve tribes were on the gates to denote that the city was
+composed of God's true and complete Israel, and the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page431" name="page431"></a>[pg 431]</span> names
+of the twelve apostles are on the foundation to denote that this
+contains the church which was "built upon the foundation of the
+apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief
+cornerstone." Eph. 2:20. The system of truth that they preached to
+the world forms the doctrinal basis of the church of God, they
+having received it from heaven "by inspiration of God," and their
+names all appear; and together they constitute one harmonious,
+solid foundation upon which the church shall stand forever.</p>
+<p>The dimensions of the city as measured by the angel are next
+given as twelve thousand furlongs, or one thousand five hundred
+miles. By the statement that the length, the breadth and the height
+are equal, some have supposed that the city was one thousand five
+hundred miles high. To quote the words of a certain commentator:
+"The language, however, will bear another meaning, which is far
+more natural. It is not that the length and breadth and height were
+severally equal to <i>each other</i>, but <i>equal with
+themselves</i>; that is the length was everywhere the same, the
+breadth everywhere the same, and the height the same. It was
+perfect and symmetrical in all its proportions. This is confirmed
+by the fact distinctly stated, that the wall was one hundred and
+forty and four cubits high, or two hundred and sixteen feet, a
+proper height for a wall; while it is said only that 'the length is
+as large as the breadth.'" This writer reckoned but eighteen inches
+for a cubit, whereas some figure twenty-two. A city one thousand
+and five hundred miles high with a wall only two hundred and
+sixteen or two hundred and sixty four feet high, would be
+altogether out of proportion.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page432" name="page432"></a>[pg
+432]</span>
+<p>The wondrous dimensions of this city set forth the fact that our
+future home far exceeds in grandeur and extent everything that is
+looked upon as glorious upon earth. Who ever heard of a city one
+thousand and five hundred miles square? We have had empires so
+large, but no such cities. In this representation the city does not
+encompass the entire earth as she in one sense really does, because
+it would be impossible thus to represent her and at the same time
+she be represented as a city within the earth, into which the
+nations bring their "glory and honor." The ancient city of Babylon
+with its beautiful hanging-gardens, the very triumph of human
+skill, and the city itself lying in a foursquare, being fifteen
+miles on each side, was unsurpassed in human loveliness. But the
+city of God is represented as <i>fifteen hundred</i> miles square,
+which dimensions are out of all proportion with anything existing
+on earth; hence its beauty and magnificence must be ascribed to God
+only.</p>
+<p>"And the building of the wall of it was of jasper: and the city
+was pure gold like unto clear glass." The jasper is the same
+crystal gem before mentioned. What a wondrous wall it must have
+been! It was not made of such common material as granite,
+freestone, or marble, which can make the most imposing structures
+that human pride can rear, and which are fit for the residence of
+lofty kings; but it was of jasper, clear as crystal. Think of the
+wall of this holy city being nearly three hundred feet high and
+stretching around the city six thousand miles, all built of the
+purest diamond! No stretch of the human imagination can properly
+compass such a vision. In rearing earthly <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page433" name="page433"></a>[pg 433]</span>
+structures men seek such material as combine durability, cheapness,
+beauty, and ease of being wrought. Look at this wall! For
+<i>durability</i>, it has the most indestructible material that can
+be found on earth. For <i>beauty</i>, the language of man can not
+even convey a meagre description of its amazing loveliness. For
+<i>cheapness</i>&mdash;God's riches were inexhaustible, hence it
+was not necessary to take this into consideration. For <i>ease of
+being wrought</i>&mdash;think of the vast amount of labor it
+requires to cut and shape even one large diamond, it being said to
+require in some cases years of incessant toil; yet God could afford
+to build the wall of this city of such material. Oh, wonders of
+God's handiwork! How inexpressibly glorious! This, my dear reader,
+symbolizes the priceless worth of our eternal home, secured through
+the atonement. Study the plan of redemption. There is nothing equal
+to it in the universe. "What is a man profited, if he gain the
+whole world, and <i>lose his own soul</i>?"</p>
+<p>Men become greatly agitated over the announcement of the
+discovery of gold in the Klondyke, in the Australian continent, in
+California, and with feverish excitement they abandon their homes
+and rush headlong to the reputed El Dorado, fearing neither famine,
+storms, deserts, nor the icy northern blasts. But all the gold ever
+mined from the bowels of the earth is insignificant and forms no
+comparison with the representation of this city. Its streets and
+mansions were built, not of common cement, lumber, nor even granite
+and marble, but <i>of pure gold</i>.</p>
+<p>The twelve courses of stone in the foundation of the wall have
+already been mentioned. It is here particularly described. One
+might suppose that, according <span class="pagenum"><a id="page434"
+name="page434"></a>[pg 434]</span> to human custom, rougher
+material would be selected for the foundation. Not so, however. The
+most brilliant and costly gems were chosen to lay these courses.
+Nothing cheap nor common had anything to do in the construction of
+this marvelous city. It was altogether beyond the reach of men to
+imitate: it was God's own handiwork; and we can not but admire its
+wondrous beauty. It is unnecessary to give a minute description of
+the gems of which these foundation-courses were composed. They were
+the most beautiful and costly of which men possess any knowledge.
+In appearance they represent various colors of the most delicate
+shades. Royal persons wear even the smallest of these gems upon
+their persons and imagine themselves richly adorned; but in this
+city of God they appear in such abundance that they are even
+selected to form the basis, or foundation, of the wall. "And the
+twelve gates were twelve pearls; every several gate was of one
+pearl." We have rich necklaces of pearl; but where is the
+individual that was ever blessed with such a profusion of wealth
+that he could ornament the gates of a city with pearls? The gates
+of the New Jerusalem, however, were not merely ornamented or
+studded with pearls&mdash;that were a very small thing for
+her&mdash;but each gate was of one solid pearl. To conceive the
+immensity of this representation we must consider the size of the
+gates required to accommodate the multitudes constantly entering
+and departing from a city. To be in proportion to the wall they
+would have to be of immense size, and also of prodigious strength
+in order to resist the assaults of enemies, as they would be the
+first places attacked. The gate of the temple called <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page435" name="page435"></a>[pg 435]</span>
+Beautiful, mentioned in the Book of Acts, which was in the wall
+surrounding the temple, is said to have been seventy-five feet high
+and sixty in width, built of Corinthian brass. Yet immense as they
+were, those in the New Jerusalem were each of one solid pearl. Oh,
+beautiful city of God, the home of the saints!</p>
+<p>The most prominent object within the walls of the ancient
+Jerusalem was the magnificent temple on Mount Zion. It was the
+chief ornament and glory of the city. In the New Jerusalem,
+however, no temple is seen. Alas! is not this a great defect? What
+is Jerusalem without a temple where the tribes may go up and
+worship before the Lord? Oh, they need no temple in this glorious
+city of God; for there is one there greater than the temple: "the
+Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple of it." This
+doubtless sets forth the fact that the worship of God is pure and
+spiritual and of free access to all. Under the old dispensation the
+high priest alone, and he but once a year, was permitted to enter
+the sacred precincts of the Deity as limited to the inner sanctuary
+of the temple. Now God's people need no mediating priest to offer
+up a special sacrifice that the will of God might be known; but all
+are kings and priests who offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable
+to God by Jesus Christ (1 Pet. 2:5); yea, as saith the prophet,
+"they <i>shall all know me</i> from the least of them unto the
+greatest of them, saith the Lord." Jer. 31:34. No temple is needed
+that the Shekinah of the divine presence may take up its abode
+between the cherubim in the most holy place, but "the glory of the
+Lord" fills the entire city. It can not be confined to a given
+locality. "The Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page436" name="page436"></a>[pg 436]</span> the
+temple of it," and they constitute the glory of the New Jerusalem
+as did the temple on Mount Zion that of the old.</p>
+<p>"The nations of them which are saved shall walk in the light of
+it." Can any one conceive the grandeur and the sublimity of the
+scene when a light that eclipses the sun and the moon is reflected
+from streets and mansions of gold, or comes streaming through a
+wall composed of the most brilliant gems of different hues, with
+gates of solid pearl? No wonder, then, that the poet has
+denominated it "the beautiful light of God"! The gates are open
+continuously, for they are not closed by day, and "there shall be
+no night there." But "there shall in no wise enter into it anything
+that defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination, or maketh a
+lie: but they which are written in the Lamb's book of Life." This,
+my dear reader, is the reward of the New Testament church, "the
+church of God."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page437" name="page437"></a>[pg
+437]</span> <a name="chap22" id="chap22"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
+<a name="chap22-1" id="chap22-1"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>And he showed me a pure river of water of life, dear as crystal,
+proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb.</p>
+<p>2. In the midst of the street of it, and on either side of the
+river, was there the tree of life, which bare twelve manner of
+fruits, and yielded her fruit every month: and the leaves of the
+tree were for the healing of the nations.</p>
+<p>3. And there shall be no more curse: but the throne of God and
+of the Lamb shall be in it; and his servants shall serve him:</p>
+<p>4. And they shall see his face; and his name shall be in their
+foreheads.</p>
+<p>5. And there shall be no night there; and they need no candle,
+neither light of the sun; for the Lord God giveth them light: and
+they shall reign for ever and ever.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The description of the New Jerusalem continues in the first five
+verses of this chapter. By the "river of the water of life" is
+doubtless meant full salvation, which as a mighty flowing stream
+issues "out of the throne of God and of the Lamb." To this fountain
+of living waters an invitation is now given to all to come and
+partake to their satisfaction. "The Spirit and the bride say, Come.
+And let him that heareth say, Come. And whosoever will, let him
+take the water of life freely." Verse 17. As a defense to God's
+people in this world salvation is represented as a great wall
+surrounding them (Isa. 26:12); but as a source of joy, holiness and
+happiness, it is a living stream <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page438" name="page438"></a>[pg 438]</span> whereof all may
+partake. While this symbol meets an appropriate fulfilment in the
+present dispensation, yet salvation will also be the eternal
+possession of the saints in the world to come, when "they shall
+hunger no more, neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun
+light on them, nor any heat. For the Lamb, which is in the midst
+thereof, shall feed them, and shall <i>lead them unto living
+fountains of waters</i>; and God shall wipe away all tears from
+their eyes." Chap. <a href="#chap7-16">7:16, 17</a>.</p>
+<p>In a most appropriate place, upon the banks of the river, grew
+"the tree of life, which bare twelve manner of fruits, and yielded
+her fruit every month: and the leaves of the tree were for the
+healing of the nations." The tree of life in the garden of Eden was
+a symbol of man's immortality or incorruption, or rather the
+<i>means</i> of it; for after his fall it was securely guarded and
+he driven from the garden, "lest he put forth his hand, and take
+also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever" (Gen. 3:22)
+and thus frustrate the decree of God just uttered&mdash;that he
+should return unto dust and corruption. In the New Jerusalem,
+however, that tree of life blooms again and bears fruit abundantly,
+yea continuously, as symbolized by "every month," and no cherubim
+with flaming sword are placed to guard all approach to it. The
+privilege is open; for it is added immediately, "There <i>shall be
+no more curse</i>." This, then, symbolizes the removal of spiritual
+death and the impartation of everlasting life in this world and
+immortality in the next. The tree of life grew on both sides of the
+river. On this side of the line of mortality we have <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page439" name="page439"></a>[pg 439]</span> access
+to it in one important sense, while those in the future world are
+preserved also by its healing benefits.</p>
+<p>The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit abide in this city. God reveals
+himself, not to a few chosen priests only through the Shekinah of
+his presence, but to all his servants&mdash;"they all see his
+face." As in the ancient tabernacle he manifested himself by "the
+glory of the Lord," or the Shekinah, which was represented as
+"seeing his face"; so, also, the "glory of the Lord" abides in the
+New Jerusalem, filling the entire city with the holy manifestation
+of the divine presence. His people are "sealed with that Holy
+Spirit of promise," by which they possess the name of their
+Father&mdash;not the name of the beast nor of his image, but <i>the
+name of the Father</i>.</p>
+<p>"And there shall be no night there; and they need no candle,
+neither light of the sun; for the Lord God giveth them light: and
+they shall reign forever and ever." This city has no need of
+natural or artificial light, "for the Lamb is the light thereof."
+Chap. 21:23. The light of the sun stands connected with the light
+of a candle and both are represented as unnecessary, which denotes
+that "there shall be no night there," but one clear eternal
+day.</p>
+<a name="chap22-6" id="chap22-6"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>6. And he said unto me, These sayings are faithful and true: and
+the Lord God of the holy prophets sent his angel to show unto his
+servants the things which must shortly be done.</p>
+<p>7. Behold, I come quickly: blessed is he that keepeth the
+sayings of the prophecy of this book.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The language of symbols is discontinued. With the description of
+the New Jerusalem closes the grand <span class="pagenum"><a id=
+"page440" name="page440"></a>[pg 440]</span> panoramic scene of
+this book. Wondrous indeed have been the events of earth
+prophetically outlined, but we have the assurance that "these
+things are faithful and true." A continuous political and
+ecclesiastical history of that portion of the earth made the
+subject of Apocalyptic vision, from the dawn of Christianity until
+the last day, was here written down in advance. After the permanent
+division of the empire, which occurred under Valens and
+Valentinian<a id="footnotetag16" name="footnotetag16"></a><a href=
+"#footnote16"><sup>16</sup></a> in A.D. 364, it was necessary that
+the political and the ecclesiastical history of the empire should
+be divided in the prophecy. This inspiration has done. The downfall
+of the Western empire is clearly predicted in the symbols under the
+first four trumpets; but the eclipse is afterwards lifted, and the
+same Western empire again appears in Imperial form under the
+control of the Papacy. After giving their power and strength unto
+the beast during the Dark Ages, the horns afterward turn against
+the Papacy and rob her of all her temporal authority and power,
+thus pointing us clearly to the history of modern Europe, in which
+the prophecy has been actually fulfilled. They themselves end at
+the judgment of the last day. Thus, the political history of the
+Western empire is carried through to the end. The <span class=
+"pagenum"><a id="page441" name="page441"></a>[pg 441]</span>
+Eastern division of the empire is also made a subject of prophecy,
+and its overthrow is described under the sixth trumpet. This was
+effected by the second woe, or the rise of the Ottoman power, and
+that woe is represented as continuing until after the death and the
+resurrection of the two witnesses and terminating shortly before
+the end of time. Therefore the political history of the Eastern
+empire, which has been under the power of the Turks for centuries,
+is outlined until the end. The ecclesiastical history of the
+Eastern empire is also given, its most prominent feature being the
+rise and the development of that pest of Mohammedanism, which rests
+like a dark cloud over that fair country until this day. In the
+Western division the rise of the Papacy, its continuation, the rise
+of Protestantism and its duration, are all clearly outlined,
+reaching down to these last days. Then the scene is suddenly
+enlarged and is carried beyond the limits of the earth&mdash;the
+Apocalyptic earth&mdash;into "the whole world," when the powers of
+wickedness are combined in spirit to antagonize the reformation of
+holiness and truth which God is using to gather his faithful ones
+together in preparation for the coming of the Son of God to
+judgment. In view of these wonderful events of the last days, how
+comforting the words of the text before us&mdash;"Behold, <i>I come
+quickly:</i> blessed is he that keepeth the sayings of the prophecy
+of this book"!</p>
+<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote16" name=
+"footnote16"></a><b>Footnote 16:</b> <a href=
+"#footnotetag16">(return)</a>
+<p>Some historians give A.D. 395 as the date of the permanent
+division of the empire. The government of the Eastern and Western
+divisions was separate from the accession of Valens and
+Valentinian, in 364, until during the reign of Theodosius the
+Great, when the West, through the jealous rivalries of different
+competitors for the throne, had fallen into great disorder.
+Theodosius twice interposed to right matters and finally took the
+government into his own hands for the space of four months, in 395,
+when he died, after arranging for the division of the empire
+between his two sons Arcadius and Honorius.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<a name="chap22-8" id="chap22-8"></a>
+<blockquote>
+<p>8. And I John saw these things, and heard them. And when I had
+heard and seen, I fell down to worship before the feet of the angel
+which showed me these things.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page442" name="page442"></a>[pg
+442]</span> <a name="chap22-9" id="chap22-9"></a>
+<p>9. Then saith he unto me, See thou do it not: for I am thy
+fellowservant, and of thy brethren the prophets, and of them which
+keep the sayings of this book: worship God.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The mind of the apostle was so enraptured with the visions he
+beheld that he could not but adore and worship; but the angel that
+had been the chosen instrument to reveal these prophecies refused
+his act of homage and instructed him to "worship God." Created
+intelligences are not worthy of such respect; to God alone all
+honor and praise belongs. Jesus Christ our Redeemer is
+God&mdash;God over all, blessed forever. As such he is worthy of
+the homage supreme of all our hearts, the praises of all our
+lips.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>10. And he saith unto me, Seal not the sayings of the prophecy
+of this book: for the time is at hand.</p>
+<p>11. He that is unjust, let him be unjust still: and he which is
+filthy, let him be filthy still: and he that is righteous, let him
+be righteous still: and he that is holy, let him be holy still.</p>
+<p>12. And, behold, I come quickly; and my reward is with me, to
+give every man according as his work shall be.</p>
+<p>13. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first
+and the last.</p>
+<a name="chap22-14" id="chap22-14"></a>
+<p>14. Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may
+have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates
+into the city.</p>
+<p>15. For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers, and
+murderers, and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and maketh a
+lie.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page443" name="page443"></a>[pg
+443]</span>
+<p>The popular opinion is that this book of the Revelation is
+sealed; but John received the direct command, "<i>Seal not</i> the
+sayings of the prophecy of this book." The majority of the teachers
+of Babylon to-day are fulfilling Isaiah 29:9-11, and that is the
+reason why it has become to them a sealed book. God makes known the
+blessed truths of the prophecies of this book to his own beloved
+children, who walk before him in sincerity and truth. A blessing is
+pronounced upon us if we keep them. His coming is near at hand, and
+his reward is with him to render unto every man according as his
+work shall be. No offers of salvation will be extended when Christ
+appears to give us access to the tree of immortal life and an
+abundant entrance into the eternal city beyond; but it will then be
+said, "He that is unjust, <i>let him be</i> unjust still: and he
+which is filthy, let him be filthy still: and he that is righteous,
+let him be righteous still: and he that is holy, let him be holy
+still." "Dogs" are left without. This term as applied to a person
+is one of great reproach. It is so among us, and much more so among
+the Jews, by whom that animal was regarded as unclean. It signifies
+evil workers. Evil characters of every class will have no part in
+the heavenly realm, but will be cast into the lake of fire. It will
+be the perfection of misery to be banished forever from the
+presence of God and the companionship of all that is good and holy.
+"Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have
+right to the tree of Life, and may enter in through the gates into
+the city."</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page444" name="page444"></a>[pg
+444]</span>
+<blockquote>
+<p>16. I Jesus have sent mine angel to testify unto you these
+things in the churches. I am the root and the offspring of David,
+and the bright and morning star.</p>
+<p>17. And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that
+heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever
+will, let him take the water of life freely.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The statements of these verses have been considered heretofore,
+hence there is no necessity of further comment on them in this
+connection.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>18. For I testify unto every man that heareth the words of the
+prophecy of this book, If any man shall add unto these things, God
+shall add unto him the plagues that are written in this book:</p>
+<p>19. And if any man shall take away from the words of the book of
+this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the book of
+life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are
+written in this book.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Here is the most solemn warning against any one who should
+presume to corrupt the prophecies of the Revelation by adding to or
+taking away from them. Nor was such a warning needless. This book
+contains the long history of God's church, and also the history of
+all her persecutors, painted in colors of deepest infamy, and the
+final doom that awaits them. These enemies were to ride in triumph
+over the earth during a long career of centuries, when the children
+of God should be trodden down beneath their feet, as it were, while
+they boasted themselves as being the true church, the anointed of
+heaven. These <span class="pagenum"><a id="page445" name=
+"page445"></a>[pg 445]</span> Revelations were to be handed down to
+succeeding generations through these very persecutors. The great
+whore of Babylon had her likeness taken and then committed to her
+for preservation. Would she not falsify them? Nearly all the early
+records of the church have been corrupted by the church of Rome.
+For ages it has been a doctrine of that institution that pious
+fraud was consistent and even commendable when practised to further
+the influence of that church. Yea, she has proclaimed openly and
+unblushingly that if her cause could be promoted by deception and
+lies they were perfectly justifiable; and her practise has been
+consistent with her teachings. In view of the fact that God's Word
+was to pass through the depths of this "mystery of iniquity," it is
+not surprising that we find annexed to this concluding portion of
+Holy Writ the awful anathema: "If any man shall add unto these
+things, God shall add unto him the plagues that are written in this
+book: and if any man shall take away from the words of the book of
+this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the book of
+life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are
+written in this book."</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>20. He which testifieth these things saith, Surely I come
+quickly. Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus.</p>
+<p>21. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all.
+Amen.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>What importance is attached to the second coming of Christ! Over
+and over again it is stated distinctly. It is the grand climax unto
+which all the series of events in this book leads.</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page446" name="page446"></a>[pg
+446]</span>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Are you ready, waiting for the Lord?</p>
+<p class="i2">See, the signs proclaim him near;</p>
+<p>In the awful thunders of his Word,</p>
+<p class="i2">Now his coming steps we hear.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Now are many running to and fro,</p>
+<p class="i2">Spreading holiness around;</p>
+<p>And the evening light begins to glow,</p>
+<p class="i2">Soon we'll hear the trumpet's sound.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Hark! the solemn warning unto all,</p>
+<p class="i2">Judgment's coming, oh, how soon!</p>
+<p>Flee, O man, at Mercy's final call,</p>
+<p class="i2">Heaven trembles at your doom.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"Christ is coming, oh, the heavenly sight!</p>
+<p class="i2">Our Beloved can't delay,</p>
+<p>For his bride is robed in snowy white,</p>
+<p class="i2">Ready for the marriage-day."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Amen. "Even so come, Lord Jesus." Then will appear the great
+"Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending." In the beginning
+he "created the heaven and the earth." In the end, John said, "I
+saw a new heaven and a new earth: for the first heaven and the
+first earth were passed away; and there was no more sea." In the
+beginning Satan entered the domain of God's people to deceive and
+destroy. In the end he is cast out, and will deceive the nations no
+more. In the beginning sickness, pain, sorrow, and wretchedness
+found entrance to the world. In the end "God shall wipe away all
+tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more sorrow, nor
+crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things
+are passed away." In the beginning the people of earth were placed
+under the iron hand of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page447" name=
+"page447"></a>[pg 447]</span> death, who has claimed his teeming
+millions. In the end, "I saw the dead, small and great, stand
+before God.... And the sea gave up the dead which were in it; and
+death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them ... and
+death and hell were cast into the lake of fire." In the beginning
+was a blooming garden containing the tree of immortal life. In the
+end we find the tree of life again "in the midst of the Paradise of
+God." In the beginning a curse was placed upon this earth. In the
+world to come "there shall be no more curse: but the throne of God
+and of the Lamb shall be in it." In the beginning the first Adam
+lost his universal dominion over the earth. In the end we find
+Jesus Christ, the second Adam, crowned King of kings and Lord of
+lords, and reigning in triumph and glory forever. In the beginning
+man was barred from the tree of life and driven from the garden of
+Eden. In the end, "Blessed are they that do his commandments, that
+they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through
+the gates into the city." <a name="Index" id="Index"></a></p>
+<h2>INDEX</h2>
+<pre>
+A
+
+Aachen, <a href="#page326">326</a>.
+Abaddon, <a href="#page162">162</a>.
+Abubekr, first caliph, <a href="#page155">155</a>.
+Aegean Sea, <a href="#page36">36</a>, <a href="#page46">46</a>.
+Africa, conquered by Saracens, <a href="#page160">160</a>.
+Ahab, <a href="#page53">53</a>.
+Alani, <a href="#page145">145</a>.
+Alans, <a href="#page146">146</a>, <a href="#page215">215</a>.
+Alaric, invades Italy, <a href="#page136">136-141</a>, <a href=
+"#page149">149</a>.
+Ala-Shehr, <a href="#page63">63</a>.
+Albi, council of, <a href="#page339">339</a>.
+Albigenses, <a href="#page113">113</a>, <a href=
+"#page161">161</a>, <a href="#page196">196</a>, <a href=
+"#page270">270</a>, <a href="#page342">342</a>.
+Aleppo, <a href="#page165">165</a>.
+Alexander I., <a href="#page172">172</a>.
+Alexander the Great, <a href="#page320">320</a>.
+Alexander VI., Pope, <a href="#page346">346</a>, <a href=
+"#page347">347</a>.
+Alexandria, <a href="#page109">109</a>, <a href="#page110">110</a>.
+Alison, A., quoted, <a href="#page307">307-315</a>.
+Ammianus Marcellinus, quoted, <a href="#page188">188</a>.
+Amiens, <a href="#page140">140</a>.
+Ammon, <a href="#page330">330</a>.
+Anabaptists, <a href="#page292">292</a>.
+Anglo-Saxons, <a href="#page215">215</a>.
+Anthony, founder of monasticism, <a href=
+"#page189">189</a>, <a href="#page190">190</a>.
+Antioch, <a href="#page104">104</a>, <a href=
+"#page109">109</a>, <a href="#page110">110</a>.
+Antioch Epiphanes, <a href="#page230">230</a>.
+Antipas, <a href="#page49">49</a>.
+Apollo, <a href="#page241">241</a>.
+Apollyon, <a href="#page162">162</a>.
+Aquinas, Thos., <a href="#page340">340</a>, <a href=
+"#page341">341</a>.
+Arabia, <a href="#page330">330</a>; conquered by Saracens, <a href=
+"#page160">160</a>.
+Arras, <a href="#page140">140</a>.
+Arcadius, Roman emp., <a href="#page137">137</a>, <a href=
+"#page138">138</a>, <a href="#page440">440</a>, <a href=
+"#footnote16">n</a>.
+Argos, <a href="#page137">137</a>.
+Armageddon, <a href="#page332">332</a>.
+Armenia, <a href="#page330">330</a>; conquered by Turks, <a href=
+"#page165">165</a>.
+Arnout, Mme., quoted, <a href="#page310">310</a>.
+Asbury, Bishop, <a href="#page368">368</a>.
+Assyria, <a href="#page330">330</a>.
+Astolphus, k. of Lombards, <a href="#page351">351</a>, <a href=
+"#footnote14">n</a>.
+Athanasius, <a href="#page190">190</a>.
+Athens, <a href="#page137">137</a>.
+Attalus, <a href="#page139">139</a>.
+Atkins, Robert, quoted, <a href="#page365">365</a>.
+Attica, <a href="#page137">137</a>.
+Attila, <a href="#page142">142</a>, <a href=
+"#page145">145</a>, <a href="#page146">146</a>, <a href=
+"#page149">149</a>.
+Atys, <a href="#page407">407</a>.
+Augsburg, <a href="#page191">191</a>.
+Augsburg Confession (A.D. 1530), <a href=
+"#page191">191</a>, <a href="#page247">247</a>, <a href=
+"#page252">252</a>, <a href="#page253">253</a>.
+Augustine, <a href="#page96">96</a>.
+Augustines, Order of, <a href="#page246">246</a>, <a href=
+"#page251">251</a>.
+Augustulus, Roman emp., <a href="#page148">148</a>.
+Augustus C&aelig;sar, first Roman emp., <a href="#page222">222</a>.
+Aurelian, Roman emp., <a href="#page189">189</a>.
+Aurelius, Marcus, Roman emp., <a href="#page46">46</a>, <a href=
+"#page98">98</a>.
+Austerlitz, battle of, <a href="#page322">322</a>.
+Avignon, 327; removal of Papal chair to, <a href=
+"#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page306">306</a>;
+ council of, <a href="#page339">339</a>.
+
+
+B
+
+Babylon, taken by Cyrus, <a href="#page166">166</a>, <a href=
+"#page329">329</a>, <a href="#page331">331</a>;
+ great edifices of, <a href="#page432">432</a>.
+Babylonian empire, <a href="#page330">330</a>, <a href=
+"#page397">397</a>.
+Bacchus, <a href="#page407">407</a>.
+Bagdad, founded (A.D. 762), <a href="#page160">160</a>, <a href=
+"#page165">165</a>.
+Balaam, <a href="#page49">49</a>, <a href="#page50">50</a>.
+Balak, <a href="#page50">50</a>.
+Barak, <a href="#page332">332</a>.
+Barnes, Dr., quoted, <a href="#page359">359</a>.
+Baronius, quoted, <a href="#page345">345</a>.
+Barrows, John Henry, quoted, <a href="#page409">409</a>, <a href=
+"#page410">410</a>.
+Basil, council of, <a href="#page340">340</a>.
+Bayazid, Sultan, <a href="#page61">61</a>.
+Bedford jail, <a href="#page36">36</a>.
+Beethoven, <a href="#page88">88</a>.
+Behiston rock, noted inscription on, <a href=
+"#page18">18</a>, <a href="#footnote1">n</a>.
+Belisarius, general of Justinian, <a href=
+"#page148">148</a>, <a href="#page236">236</a>, <a href=
+"#page351">351</a>, <a href="#footnote14">n</a>.
+Bellarmine, Cardinal, quoted, <a href="#page341">341</a>, <a href=
+"#page342">342</a>.
+Benedict IX., Pope, <a href="#page345">345</a>, <a href=
+"#page346">346</a>.
+Bernard, 197; quoted, <a href="#page199">199</a>.
+Beziers, council of, <a href="#page339">339</a>.
+Boetia, <a href="#page137">137</a>.
+Bohemia, <a href="#page244">244</a>, <a href="#page339">339</a>.
+Bologna, <a href="#page327">327</a>.
+Bonaparte, Jerome, <a href="#page321">321</a>.
+Bonaparte, Louis, <a href="#page321">321</a>.
+Bonaparte, Joseph, <a href="#page321">321</a>.
+Bonaparte, Napoleon, <a href="#page172">172</a>, <a href=
+"#page317">317</a>, <a href="#page320">320-325</a>, <a href=
+"#page327">327</a>.
+Boniface IV., Pope, <a href="#page240">240</a>.
+Bonney, Chas. Carroll, quoted, <a href="#page408">408</a>, <a href=
+"#page409">409</a>.
+Borgia, Roderick, <a href="#page346">346</a>, <a href=
+"#page347">347</a>.
+Bosphorus, <a href="#page171">171</a>.
+Bouchard, M., <a href="#page18">18</a>, <a href="#footnote1">n</a>.
+Buddha, <a href="#page409">409</a>.
+Bunyan, John, his imprisonment, <a href="#page36">36</a>, <a href=
+"#footnote2">n</a>., <a href="#page293">293</a>.
+Burgundians, <a href="#page215">215</a>.
+Burgundy, <a href="#page215">215</a>.
+Burke, quoted, <a href="#page303">303</a>.
+Butler, quoted, <a href="#page222">222</a>, <a href=
+"#page223">223</a>, <a href="#page224">224</a>, <a href=
+"#page230">230</a>, <a href="#page231">231</a>.
+
+
+C
+
+Cadiz, <a href="#page324">324</a>.
+C&aelig;sar, <a href="#page320">320</a>.
+C&aelig;sar Augustus, Roman emp., <a href="#page222">222</a>.
+Calcedon, council of, <a href="#page110">110</a>.
+Calvin, John, reformer, <a href="#page252">252</a>
+Calvinists, <a href="#page252">252</a>, <a href="#page291">291</a>.
+Campbell, Alexander, quoted, <a href="#page359">359</a>, <a href=
+"#page360">360</a>.
+Canoosa, <a href="#page111">111</a>.
+Canterbury, See of, <a href="#page112">112</a>, <a href=
+"#footnote4">n</a>.
+Carlovingian dynasty, <a href="#page325">325</a>, <a href=
+"#page326">326</a>, <a href="#page350">350-352</a>.
+Carrier, <a href="#page310">310</a>, <a href="#page311">311</a>.
+Cassini, quoted, <a href="#page200">200</a>.
+Cathari, <a href="#page196">196</a>.
+Catherine de Medici, <a href="#page118">118</a>.
+Catherine the Great of Russia, <a href="#page172">172</a>.
+Chaldea, <a href="#page330">330</a>.
+Chalons, <a href="#page146">146</a>.
+Charlemagne, <a href="#page236">236</a>, <a href=
+"#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page320">320</a>, <a href=
+"#page325">325</a>;
+ restores the Western empire, <a href="#page325">325</a>, <a href=
+"#page326">326</a>, <a href="#page350">350-352</a>;
+ patriciate of, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href=
+"#page351">351</a>, also <a href="#footnote14">n</a>.
+Charles Martel, <a href="#page161">161</a>, <a href=
+"#page325">325</a>.
+Charles V., k. of France, <a href="#page307">307</a>.
+Charles IX., k. of France, <a href="#page118">118</a>.
+Chase, Chas. Wingate, quoted, <a href="#page405">405</a>.
+Chaumette, <a href="#page308">308</a>, <a href="#page309">309</a>.
+Christians,
+ persecutions of, <a href="#page97">97</a>, <a href=
+"#page295">295</a>;
+ by the Roman emperors (ten seasons of), <a href=
+"#page98">98</a>, <a href="#page116">116</a>, <a href=
+"#page230">230</a>, <a href="#page231">231</a>;
+ by the Papacy, <a href="#page113">113</a>, <a href=
+"#page116">116-118</a>, <a href="#page196">196-200</a>, <a href=
+"#page243">243</a>, <a href="#page295">295</a>, <a href=
+"#page338">338-344</a>;
+ by Protestants, <a href="#page252">252</a>, <a href=
+"#page291">291-294</a>.
+Christian Science, <a href="#page410">410</a>, <a href=
+"#page411">411</a>.
+Chrysostom, <a href="#page96">96</a>.
+Cicero, <a href="#page222">222</a>.
+Claudius, quoted, <a href="#page199">199</a>.
+Clement of Rome, <a href="#page95">95</a>.
+Cologne (wrongly spelled Colonge in text), <a href=
+"#page197">197</a>.
+Constance, council of, <a href="#page244">244</a>, <a href=
+"#page245">245</a>, <a href="#page339">339</a>, <a href=
+"#page345">345</a>.
+Constantine the Great, <a href="#page189">189</a>, <a href=
+"#page231">231</a>, <a href="#page241">241</a>.
+Constantinople, <a href="#page158">158</a>;
+ captured by the Turks (A.D. 1453), <a href="#page169">169</a>;
+ council of, <a href="#page109">109</a>, <a href=
+"#page344">344</a>.
+Constitutionalists, <a href="#page314">314</a>.
+Consular power, <a href="#page214">214</a>, also <a href=
+"#footnote8">n</a>., <a href="#page351">351</a>.
+Copenhagen, <a href="#page324">324</a>.
+Corinth, <a href="#page137">137</a>.
+Council, first of church, <a href="#page231">231</a>.
+Councils, general, of church, <a href="#page109">109</a>, <a href=
+"#page231">231</a>, <a href="#page321">321</a>, <a href=
+"#page339">339</a>, <a href="#page340">340</a>, <a href=
+"#page345">345</a>, <a href="#page346">346</a>.
+Covenanters, Scotch, <a href="#page293">293</a>, <a href=
+"#page294">294</a>.
+Creasy, quoted, <a href="#page324">324</a>.
+Crellius, <a href="#page292">292</a>.
+Croesus, k. of Lydia, <a href="#page56">56</a>.
+Crusades, <a href="#page166">166</a>.
+Cyprian, <a href="#page107">107</a>.
+Cyrus the Great, his capture of Babylon, <a href=
+"#page166">166</a>, <a href="#page329">329</a>, <a href=
+"#page331">331</a>.
+
+
+D
+
+Dacia, <a href="#page137">137</a>.
+D'Alembert, <a href="#page297">297-303</a>.
+Dalmatia, <a href="#page136">136</a>.
+Damascus, <a href="#page165">165</a>.
+Daniel, prophecies of, <a href="#page235">235-238</a>.
+Danton, <a href="#page310">310</a>.
+Dantonists, <a href="#page315">315</a>.
+Darwin, <a href="#page411">411</a>.
+D'Aubigne, quoted, <a href="#page96">96</a>, <a href=
+"#page185">185</a>, <a href="#page191">191</a>, <a href=
+"#page192">192</a>, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href=
+"#page208">208</a>, <a href="#page209">209</a>, <a href=
+"#page244">244</a>, <a href="#page245">245</a>, <a href=
+"#page247">247</a>, <a href="#page253">253</a>, <a href=
+"#page276">276</a>, <a href="#page277">277</a>.
+Decemvirate, <a href="#page214">214</a>, also <a href=
+"#footnote8">n</a>., <a href="#page351">351</a>.
+Decius, Roman emp., <a href="#page98">98</a>.
+Decretals of Isodore, <a href="#page344">344</a>.
+Demetrius, <a href="#page43">43</a>.
+Demetrius Cantemir, quoted, <a href="#page170">170</a>.
+Diana, <a href="#page241">241</a>;
+ temple of at Ephesus, <a href="#page42">42</a>, <a href=
+"#page64">64</a>.
+Diderot, <a href="#page297">297-308</a>.
+Dictator, office of, at Rome, <a href="#page214">214</a>, <a href=
+"#footnote8">n</a>.
+Diocletian, Roman emp., <a href="#page48">48</a>, <a href=
+"#page98">98</a>, <a href="#page230">230</a>.
+Dionysis, <a href="#page407">407</a>.
+Diotrephes, <a href="#page102">102</a>, <a href="#page103">103</a>.
+Donatists, <a href="#page342">342</a>.
+Domitian, Roman emp., <a href="#page36">36</a>, <a href=
+"#page98">98</a>.
+Domnus, <a href="#page189">189</a>.
+Dow, Lorenzo, quoted, <a href="#page278">278</a>, <a href=
+"#page360">360</a>.
+Dowling, quoted, <a href="#page187">187</a>, <a href=
+"#page188">188</a>, <a href="#page189">189</a>, <a href=
+"#page190">190</a>, <a href="#page196">196</a>, <a href=
+"#page241">241</a>, <a href="#page243">243</a>.
+Duke of Alva, <a href="#page118">118</a>.
+Du Guesclin, <a href="#page307">307</a>.
+Dupin, quoted, <a href="#page344">344</a>.
+Dwight, Pres., quoted, <a href="#page303">303</a>.
+
+
+E
+
+Easter, <a href="#page105">105</a>.
+Eastern Empire, See <i>Roman Empire</i>.
+Eastern Question, <a href="#page172">172</a>, <a href=
+"#page173">173</a>.
+Edgar, quoted, <a href="#page340">340</a>.
+Edict of Nantes, <a href="#page118">118</a>, <a href=
+"#page295">295</a>.
+Egbert, quoted, <a href="#page196">196</a>, <a href=
+"#page197">197</a>.
+Egypt, conquered by Saracens, <a href="#page160">160</a>.
+Elba, Island of, <a href="#page323">323</a>, <a href=
+"#page324">324</a>.
+Ephesus, fate of, <a href="#page45">45</a>, <a href=
+"#page64">64</a>, <a href="#page68">68</a>; temple at, <a href=
+"#page42">42</a>.
+Eudoxia, <a href="#page143">143</a>.
+Euphrates, <a href="#page164">164</a>, <a href=
+"#page166">166</a>; turned by Cyrus, <a href=
+"#page166">166</a>, <a href="#page329">329</a>, <a href=
+"#page331">331</a>.
+Eusebius, quoted, <a href="#page188">188</a>, <a href=
+"#page189">189</a>.
+Evervinus, quoted. <a href="#page197">197-199</a>.
+
+
+F
+
+Farrara, <a href="#page327">327</a>.
+Feldkirchen, <a href="#page247">247</a>.
+Fisher, Geo., quoted, <a href="#page103">103</a>, <a href=
+"#page189">189</a>.
+Fletcher, John, quoted, <a href="#page277">277</a>.
+Formosus, Pope, <a href="#page345">345</a>.
+Foster, Bishop R.S., quoted, <a href="#page368">368-370</a>.
+France, invaded by Saracens, <a href="#page161">161</a>.
+Francis I., of France, <a href="#page307">307</a>.
+Franks, <a href="#page146">146</a>, <a href="#page215">215</a>.
+Frederick of Saxony, quoted, <a href="#page247">247-249</a>.
+Frederick II., k. of Prussia, <a href="#page297">297</a>.
+French Revolution, <a href="#page305">305-315</a>, <a href=
+"#page324">324</a>, <a href="#page352">352</a>.
+Freron, quoted, <a href="#page313">313</a>, <a href=
+"#page314">314</a>.
+Friedland, battle of, <a href="#page322">322</a>.
+Fuller, quoted, <a href="#page340">340</a>.
+
+
+G
+
+Gallienus, Roman emp., <a href="#page187">187</a>
+Gallus, Roman emp., <a href="#page98">98</a>.
+Gascoigne, <a href="#page215">215</a>.
+Gates, Theophilus R., quoted, <a href="#page278">278-283</a>.
+Geneva, <a href="#page252">252</a>.
+Genseric, k. of Vandals, <a href="#page25">25</a>, <a href=
+"#page142">142</a>, <a href="#page143">143</a>, <a href=
+"#page149">149</a>.
+Germania, <a href="#page139">139</a>.
+Gepid&aelig;, <a href="#page145">145</a>.
+Gibbon, quoted, <a href="#page64">64</a>, <a href=
+"#page136">136-138</a>, <a href="#page142">142</a>, <a href=
+"#page143">143</a>, <a href="#page145">145</a>, <a href=
+"#page158">158</a>, <a href="#page351">351</a>.
+Gibbons, Cardinal, quoted <a href="#page343">343</a>, <a href=
+"#page344">344</a>.
+Gieseler, quoted, <a href="#page103">103</a>.
+Girondists, <a href="#page315">315</a>.
+Gnostics, <a href="#page410">410</a>.
+Gobet, <a href="#page308">308</a>.
+Goddess of Reason, <a href="#page209">209</a>, <a href=
+"#page401">401</a>.
+Goths, <a href="#page136">136</a>, <a href="#page141">141</a>.
+Greek Empire (Eastern Empire), See <i>Roman Empire</i>.
+Green, B.A., quoted, <a href="#page412">412</a>, <a href=
+"#page413">413</a>.
+Gregory VII., Pope, <a href="#page111">111</a>, <a href=
+"#page184">184</a>, <a href="#page242">242</a>.
+
+
+H
+
+Haeckel, <a href="#page411">411</a>.
+Hamlet, <a href="#page307">307</a>.
+Handel, <a href="#page88">88</a>.
+Hartley, quoted, <a href="#page361">361</a>.
+Heads, seven, of dragon and Papal beasts,
+ signifying seven forms of government,
+ <a href="#page214">214</a>, also <a href=
+"#footnote8">n</a>., <a href="#page235">235</a>, <a href=
+"#page349">349</a>, <a href="#page350">350</a>.
+Hebert, <a href="#page308">308</a>, <a href="#page309">309</a>.
+Henry VIII., k. of England, <a href="#page292">292</a>.
+Henry IV., k. of France, <a href="#page307">307</a>.
+Henry IV., emperor of Holy Roman empire, <a href=
+"#page111">111</a>.
+Henry, k. of Navarre, <a href="#page118">118</a>.
+Hera, <a href="#page154">154</a>.
+Hermus, <a href="#page56">56</a>.
+Herod Agrippa, <a href="#page240">240</a>.
+Herodotus, <a href="#page166">166</a>, <a href="#page329">329</a>.
+Heruli, <a href="#page145">145</a>, <a href=
+"#page148">148</a>, <a href="#page215">215</a>, <a href=
+"#page236">236</a>.
+Hieroglyphics, <a href="#page18">18</a>, <a href=
+"#page19">19</a>, <a href="#footnote1">n</a>.
+Hilarion, <a href="#page189">189</a>.
+Hildebrand, See <i>Gregory VII</i>.
+Hilton, John, quoted, <a href="#page246">246</a>, <a href=
+"#page247">247</a>.
+Hiram Abiff, <a href="#page407">407</a>.
+Holbach, Baron, <a href="#page300">300</a>.
+Holland, <a href="#page321">321</a>.
+Holy Roman Empire, <a href="#page325">325</a>, <a href=
+"#page326">326</a>, <a href="#page351">351</a>;
+ dissolved (A.D. 1806), <a href="#page327">327</a>.
+Honorius, Roman emp., <a href="#page136">136</a>, <a href=
+"#page138">138</a>, <a href="#page139">139</a>, <a href=
+"#page440">440</a>, <a href="#footnote16">n</a>.
+Honorius, Pope, <a href="#page344">344</a>, <a href=
+"#page346">346</a>.
+Hopkins, quoted, <a href="#page362">362</a>.
+Horn, the little, of Daniel <a href="#page7">7</a>,
+ a symbol of the Papacy, <a href="#page235">235-238</a>, <a href=
+"#page350">350</a>, <a href="#page357">357</a>.
+Horn, of the goat, symbol of Alexander, <a href="#page20">20</a>.
+Horns, ten, of the Dragon and Papal beast,
+ signifying ten kingdoms, <a href="#page14">14</a>, <a href=
+"#page215">215</a>, <a href="#page235">235</a>, <a href=
+"#page236">236</a>, <a href="#page349">349</a>.
+Horns, three, plucked up before the little horn,
+ <a href="#page236">236</a>, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href=
+"#page351">351</a>.
+Horns, four, of the goat,
+ symbolizing four divisions of Alexander's empire, <a href=
+"#page20">20</a>.
+Hugenots, <a href="#page118">118</a>.
+Hugenot wars, <a href="#page252">252</a>.
+Hungary, <a href="#page169">169</a>, <a href="#page215">215</a>.
+Huns, <a href="#page141">141</a>, <a href=
+"#page145">145</a>, <a href="#page146">146</a>, <a href=
+"#page215">215</a>.
+Huntington, Lady, <a href="#page369">369</a>.
+Huss, John, <a href="#page62">62</a>, <a href=
+"#page244">244</a>, <a href="#page245">245</a>, <a href=
+"#page249">249</a>, <a href="#page339">339</a>.
+
+
+I
+
+Iconium, <a href="#page165">165</a>.
+Ignatius, his epistles, extracts from, <a href="#page104">104</a>.
+Illuminati, <a href="#page297">297-303</a>, <a href=
+"#page404">404</a>.
+Illyricum, <a href="#page137">137</a>.
+Indulgences, <a href="#page250">250</a>, <a href=
+"#page251">251</a>.
+Imperial power, <a href="#page214">214</a>, also <a href=
+"#footnote8">n</a>.
+Innocent III., Pope, <a href="#page111">111</a>, <a href=
+"#footnote4">n</a>., <a href="#page339">339</a>.
+Innocent XI., Pope, <a href="#page118">118</a>.
+Institorus, Henry, quoted, <a href="#page246">246</a>.
+Interdicts, <a href="#page111">111</a>, also <a href=
+"#footnote4">n</a>., <a href="#page112">112</a>, also <a href=
+"#footnote4">n</a>.
+Ionia, <a href="#page64">64</a>.
+Isodore, false Decretals of, <a href="#page344">344</a>, <a href=
+"#page345">345</a>.
+Islam, See <i>Mohammedanism</i>.
+
+
+J
+
+Jena, battle of, <a href="#page322">322</a>.
+Jerome, <a href="#page36">36</a>, <a href="#page96">96</a>.
+Jerome of Prague, <a href="#page62">62</a>, <a href=
+"#page339">339</a>.
+Jerusalem, captured by Saracens, <a href="#page110">110</a>.
+Jezebel, <a href="#page53">53</a>.
+John XI., Pope, <a href="#page345">345</a>.
+John, k. of England,
+ his quarrel with Innocent III., <a href=
+"#page112">112</a>, <a href="#footnote4">n</a>.
+Johnson, B.W., quoted, <a href="#page357">357-359</a>.
+Judson, quoted, <a href="#page171">171</a>, <a href=
+"#page172">172</a>, <a href="#page321">321</a>.
+Jupiter, <a href="#page241">241</a>.
+Justinian, Roman emp., <a href="#page148">148</a>, <a href=
+"#page351">351</a>, <a href="#footnote14">n</a>.
+
+
+K
+
+Kinkade, Wm., quoted, <a href="#page359">359</a>.
+Klondyke, <a href="#page433">433</a>.
+Koran, <a href="#page158">158</a>, <a href="#page406">406</a>.
+Kurtz, quoted, <a href="#page95">95</a>, <a href="#page96">96</a>.
+
+
+L
+
+Laodicea, fate of, <a href="#page64">64</a>, <a href=
+"#page67">67</a>, <a href="#page68">68</a>.
+Lateran, councils of, <a href="#page329">329</a>, <a href=
+"#page339">339</a>, <a href="#page340">340</a>.
+Lavaur, council of, <a href="#page339">339</a>.
+Leo III., Pope, <a href="#page325">325</a>.
+Leo X., Pope, <a href="#page250">250</a>.
+Lepelletier, <a href="#page308">308</a>.
+Liszt, <a href="#page88">88</a>.
+Lombards, <a href="#page196">196</a>.
+Lombards (barbarians), <a href="#page215">215</a>, <a href=
+"#page236">236</a>, <a href="#page350">350</a>.
+Lombardy, <a href="#page351">351</a>.
+Lord, Mr., quoted, <a href="#page100">100</a>.
+Louis XII., k. of France, <a href="#page307">307</a>.
+Louis, XIV., k. of France, <a href="#page118">118</a>, <a href=
+"#page295">295</a>, <a href="#page307">307</a>.
+Lucretia, <a href="#page347">347</a>.
+Luther, Martin, reformer,
+ <a href="#page62">62</a>, <a href="#page244">244</a>, <a href=
+"#page246">246</a>, <a href="#page247">247</a>, <a href=
+"#page249">249</a>, <a href="#page251">251</a>,
+ <a href="#page252">252</a>, <a href=
+"#page342">342</a>; quoted, <a href="#page361">361</a>.
+Lutherans, <a href="#page252">252</a>, <a href="#page291">291</a>.
+Lydia, <a href="#page56">56</a>, <a href="#page64">64</a>.
+
+
+M
+
+Machiard, <a href="#page215">215</a>.
+Mackey, quoted, <a href="#page405">405</a>.
+Mackintosh, Sir James, quoted, <a href="#page323">323</a>, <a href=
+"#page324">324</a>.
+M&aelig;cenas, <a href="#page222">222</a>.
+M&aelig;sia, <a href="#page215">215</a>.
+Mahomet, See <i>Mohammed</i>.
+Manes, <a href="#page298">298</a>.
+Manicheans, <a href="#page342">342</a>.
+Mantz, Felix, <a href="#page292">292</a>.
+Marat, <a href="#page308">308</a>, <a href=
+"#page310">310</a>, <a href="#page311">311</a>.
+Marathon, battle of, <a href="#page191">191</a>.
+Marcellus, Pope, <a href="#page341">341</a>.
+Marcus Aurelius, Roman emp., <a href="#page46">46</a>, <a href=
+"#page98">98</a>.
+Marengo, battle of, <a href="#page191">191</a>, <a href=
+"#page322">322</a>.
+Marie Antoinette, q. of France, her execution, <a href=
+"#page306">306</a>.
+Marozia, <a href="#page345">345</a>.
+Marsh, quoted, <a href="#page186">186</a>.
+Martin, Pope, <a href="#page339">339</a>.
+Mary Tudor, <a href="#page117">117</a>.
+Maximus, Roman emp., <a href="#page98">98</a>, <a href=
+"#page143">143</a>.
+Mecca, <a href="#page154">154</a>.
+Megara, <a href="#page137">137</a>.
+Megiddo, <a href="#page332">332</a>.
+Melanchthon, Philip, <a href="#page247">247</a>.
+Mentz, <a href="#page140">140</a>.
+Mesopotamia, <a href="#page330">330</a>.
+Metropolitan, office of, <a href="#page105">105</a>, <a href=
+"#page106">106</a>.
+Military Tribunes, <a href="#page214">214</a>, also <a href=
+"#footnote8">n</a>.
+Milman, quoted, <a href="#page95">95</a>.
+Milner, Joseph, quoted, <a href="#page190">190</a>, <a href=
+"#page191">191</a>.
+Mithras, <a href="#page407">407</a>.
+Moab, <a href="#page330">330</a>.
+Mohammed, <a href="#page61">61</a>, <a href=
+"#page154">154-162</a>, <a href="#page389">389</a>.
+Mohammedanism, <a href="#page25">25</a>, <a href=
+"#page61">61</a>, <a href="#page134">134</a>, <a href=
+"#page154">154-173</a>, <a href="#page331">331</a>, <a href=
+"#page341">341</a>.
+Moldavia, prince of, <a href="#page170">170</a>.
+Momoro, <a href="#page309">309</a>.
+Momyllus Augustulus, Roman emp., <a href="#page148">148</a>.
+Montanism, <a href="#page105">105</a>.
+Monasticism, rise of, <a href="#page189">189</a>, <a href=
+"#page190">190</a>.
+Montesquieu, <a href="#page300">300</a>.
+Morea, <a href="#page170">170</a>.
+Moscow, <a href="#page322">322</a>, <a href="#page324">324</a>.
+Mosheim, quoted, <a href="#page94">94</a>, <a href=
+"#page105">105</a>, <a href="#page106">106</a>, <a href=
+"#page109">109</a>.
+Mozart, <a href="#page87">87</a>.
+Murat, <a href="#page321">321</a>.
+Myers, quoted, <a href="#page293">293</a>.
+Mysia, <a href="#page49">49</a>.
+Mythra, mysteries of, <a href="#page298">298</a>.
+
+
+N
+
+Nantes, <a href="#page310">310</a>; edict of, <a href=
+"#page118">118</a>, <a href="#page295">295</a>.
+Naples, <a href="#page324">324</a>.
+Napoleon, See <i>Bonaparte</i>.
+Narbonne, council of, <a href="#page339">339</a>.
+National Convention of France, <a href="#page307">307</a>, <a href=
+"#page317">317</a>.
+Nero, Roman emp., <a href="#page98">98</a>, <a href=
+"#page311">311</a>.
+Nerva, Roman emp., <a href="#page36">36</a>.
+Ney, Marshal, <a href="#page322">322</a>.
+Niagara Falls, <a href="#page87">87</a>.
+Nicaea, council of, <a href="#page109">109</a>, <a href=
+"#page231">231</a>.
+Nicolaitans, <a href="#page44">44</a>, <a href=
+"#page49">49</a>, <a href="#page50">50</a>
+Nicholas, <a href="#page172">172</a>.
+Nicolas, <a href="#page44">44</a>.
+Notre Dame, <a href="#page309">309</a>.
+
+
+O
+
+Odoacer, <a href="#page148">148</a>, <a href="#page236">236</a>.
+Oppede, <a href="#page117">117</a>.
+Oriental Philosophy, <a href="#page410">410</a>.
+Origen, <a href="#page107">107</a>.
+Osiris, <a href="#page407">407</a>.
+Ostrogoths, <a href="#page141">141</a>, <a href=
+"#page145">145</a>, <a href="#page148">148</a>, <a href=
+"#page215">215</a>, <a href="#page236">236</a>, <a href=
+"#page351">351</a>, <a href="#footnote14">n</a>.
+Othman, See <i>Ottoman</i>.
+Otto the Great, <a href="#page326">326</a>
+Ottoman, <a href="#page61">61</a>, <a href="#page169">169</a>.
+Ottoman empire, <a href="#page64">64</a>, <a href=
+"#page165">165</a>, <a href="#page173">173</a>, <a href=
+"#page441">441</a>.
+Oxford, council of, <a href="#page339">339</a>.
+
+
+P
+
+Pactolus, <a href="#page56">56</a>.
+Pache, <a href="#page308">308</a>.
+Paderewski, <a href="#page88">88</a>.
+Paganism, <a href="#page97">97</a>, <a href=
+"#page214">214-232</a>, <a href="#page331">331</a>, <a href=
+"#page388">388-390</a>.
+Palestine, conquered by Saracens, <a href="#page160">160</a>;
+ invaded by Crusaders, <a href="#page166">166</a>.
+Pannonia, <a href="#page215">215</a>.
+Papacy, first steps to apostasy,
+ <a href="#page102">102</a>, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href=
+"#page185">185</a>; growth of its power,
+ <a href="#page103">103-107</a>, <a href=
+"#page108">108</a>, <a href="#page110">110</a>, <a href=
+"#page111">111</a>, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href=
+"#page236">236-243</a>, <a href="#page352">352</a>, <a href=
+"#footnote14">n</a>.;
+ Pope styled Universal Bishop, <a href=
+"#page110">110</a>, <a href="#page184">184</a>;
+ blasphemous titles of, <a href="#page242">242</a>, <a href=
+"#page243">243</a>, <a href="#page264">264</a>, <a href=
+"#page337">337</a>;
+ its war against the saints, See <i>Christians,
+ persecutions of;</i> at its height, <a href="#page111">111</a>,
+ also <a href="#footnote4">n</a>., <a href=
+"#page184">184</a>, <a href="#page236">236</a>, <a href=
+"#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page326">326</a>, <a href=
+"#page236">236-243</a>;
+ temporal power of, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href=
+"#page236">236</a>, <a href="#page305">305</a>, <a href=
+"#page326">326</a>, <a href="#page336">336</a>, <a href=
+"#page352">352</a>, <a href="#footnote14">n</a>.;
+ removal of Papal chair to Avignon, <a href=
+"#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page306">306</a>;
+ spiritual supremacy lost at the Reformation,
+ <a href="#page191">191</a>, <a href="#page249">249-251</a>;
+ revolt of the temporal princes, <a href=
+"#page255">255</a>, <a href="#page355">355</a>;
+ end of its temporal power, <a href="#page255">255</a>, <a href=
+"#page327">327</a>, <a href="#page328">328</a>;
+ decree of Papal infallibility, <a href=
+"#page243">243</a>, <a href="#page346">346</a>.
+Papal States, See <i>Papacy, temporal power of.</i>
+Patmos, <a href="#page36">36</a>.
+Patriarch, office of, <a href="#page109">109</a>, <a href=
+"#page110">110</a>.
+Patriciate, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href=
+"#page351">351</a>, also <a href="#footnote14">n</a>.
+Paul of Antioch, <a href="#page188">188</a>, <a href=
+"#page189">189</a>.
+Paulus, <a href="#page344">344</a>.
+Pavia, battle of, <a href="#page191">191</a>.
+Pepin, Carlovingian king, <a href="#page236">236</a>, <a href=
+"#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page326">326</a>, <a href=
+"#page350">350</a>.
+Pergamus, fate of, <a href="#page64">64</a>, <a href=
+"#page68">68</a>.
+Persecutions, See <i>Christians, persecutions of.</i>
+Persia, conquered by Saracens, <a href="#page160">160</a>.
+Petrus Lombardus, <a href="#page96">96</a>.
+Peucer, <a href="#page292">292</a>.
+Philadelphia, remarkable preservation of, <a href=
+"#page61">61-64</a>, <a href="#page68">68</a>.
+Philip Augustus, <a href="#page111">111</a>.
+Philosophists, <a href="#page297">297-303</a>.
+Phocas, Roman emp. <a href="#page184">184</a>.
+Phocis, <a href="#page137">137</a>.
+Pius IV., Pope, <a href="#page327">327</a>.
+Platina, <a href="#page345">345</a>.
+Pliny, <a href="#page222">222</a>, <a href="#page226">226</a>.
+Poland, <a href="#page169">169</a>.
+Polycarp, <a href="#page46">46</a>.
+Pontifex Maxima, <a href="#page222">222</a>, <a href=
+"#page239">239</a>.
+Poor Men of Lyons, <a href="#page198">198</a>.
+Popes, power of, See <i>Papacy</i>.
+Portugal overrun by Saracens, <a href="#page160">160</a>.
+Prague, <a href="#page244">244</a>.
+Proles, Andrew, quoted, <a href="#page246">246</a>.
+Protestantism, rise of, <a href="#page191">191</a>, <a href=
+"#page252">252</a>, <a href="#page254">254</a>;
+ its false miracles, <a href="#page259">259-261</a>;
+ its persecutions, See <i>Christians,
+ persecutions of.</i>
+Proetextatus, <a href="#page188">188</a>.
+Puritans, <a href="#page293">293</a>.
+
+
+R
+
+Ravenna, <a href="#page148">148</a>, <a href=
+"#page351">351</a>, <a href="#page352">352</a>, <a href=
+"#footnote14">n</a>.;
+ exarchate of, <a href="#page351">351</a>, <a href=
+"#footnote14">n</a>.
+Reformation, the, <a href="#page249">249-252</a>;
+ predictions of by medieval Christians, <a href=
+"#page243">243-249</a>.
+Regal power, <a href="#page214">214</a>, also <a href=
+"#footnotetag8">n</a>.
+Reign of Terror in France, <a href="#page306">306-315</a>.
+Revival of Learning, <a href="#page249">249</a>.
+Rheims, <a href="#page140">140</a>.
+Roberts, Bishop, quoted, <a href="#page364">364</a>.
+Robespierre, <a href="#page307">307</a>, <a href=
+"#page309">309</a>, <a href="#page313">313</a>.
+Rodgers, Hester Ann, <a href="#page368">368</a>.
+Romagna, <a href="#page327">327</a>.
+Roman Empire, forms of, See <i>Heads, seven</i>, and <i>Horns, ten</i>;
+ Christianity the State religion under Constantine, <a href=
+"#page116">116</a>, <a href="#page231">231</a>;
+ division of under Valens and Valentinian, <a href=
+"#page440">440</a>;
+ overrun by barbarians, <a href="#page25">25</a>, <a href=
+"#page125">125</a>, <a href="#page136">136-141</a>, <a href=
+"#page142">142</a>, <a href="#page143">143</a>, <a href=
+"#page145">145</a>, <a href="#page146">146</a>, <a href=
+"#page148">148</a>;
+ fall of Western division (A.D. 476), <a href=
+"#page133">133</a>, <a href="#page148">148</a>, <a href=
+"#page236">236</a>, <a href="#page440">440</a>;
+ fall of Eastern division (A.D. 1453), <a href=
+"#page167">167</a>, <a href="#page169">169</a>, <a href=
+"#page172">172</a>, <a href="#page440">440</a>, <a href=
+"#page441">441</a>.
+Rome, <a href="#page109">109</a>, <a href=
+"#page138">138</a>, <a href="#page139">139</a>, <a href=
+"#page143">143</a>.
+Rosetta stone, <a href="#page18">18</a>, <a href=
+"#footnote1">n</a>.
+Rosseau, <a href="#page300">300</a>.
+Rubenstein, <a href="#page88">88</a>.
+Rutter, quoted, <a href="#page186">186</a>.
+
+
+S
+
+St. Anthony, <a href="#page189">189</a>, <a href=
+"#page190">190</a>.
+St. Aquinas, quoted, <a href="#page340">340</a>.
+St. Bartholomew, massacre of, <a href="#page117">117</a>.
+St. Dennis, <a href="#page307">307</a>.
+St. Petersburg, <a href="#page172">172</a>.
+Salutaris Vibius, <a href="#page42">42</a>.
+Saracens, <a href="#page26">26</a>, <a href=
+"#page61">61</a>, <a href="#page110">110</a>, <a href=
+"#page156">156-163</a>.
+Sardinia, <a href="#page143">143</a>.
+Sardis, capital of Lydia, <a href="#page56">56</a>;
+ fate of, <a href="#page58">58</a>, <a href=
+"#page64">64</a>, <a href="#page68">68</a>.
+Savage, Minton J., quoted, <a href="#page413">413-415</a>.
+Saxons, See <i>Anglo-Saxons.</i>
+Saxony, <a href="#page244">244</a>, <a href=
+"#page250">250</a>, <a href="#page251">251</a>.
+Schweinitz, <a href="#page248">248</a>.
+Scott, 0., quoted, <a href="#page363">363</a>.
+Scythia, <a href="#page136">136</a>, <a href="#page139">139</a>.
+Septimus Severus, Roman emp., <a href="#page98">98</a>, <a href=
+"#page224">224</a>.
+Sergius, Pope, <a href="#page344">344</a>, <a href=
+"#page345">345</a>, <a href="#page346">346</a>.
+Sickles, Daniel, quoted, <a href="#page405">405</a>.
+Siddartha, <a href="#page409">409</a>.
+Sienna, council of, <a href="#page340">340</a>.
+Simpson, quoted, <a href="#page362">362</a>.
+Sisera, <a href="#page332">332</a>.
+Smyrna, preservation of, <a href="#page48">48</a>, <a href=
+"#page64">64</a>, <a href="#page68">68</a>.
+Socrates, <a href="#page409">409</a>.
+Spain, overrun by Saracens, <a href="#page160">160</a>.
+Sparta, <a href="#page137">137</a>.
+Spires, <a href="#page140">140</a>, <a href="#page191">191</a>;
+ diet of, <a href="#page191">191</a>, <a href="#page253">253</a>.
+Spiritualism, <a href="#page411">411</a>, <a href=
+"#page412">412</a>.
+States-General, of France, <a href="#page306">306</a>.
+Strasburg, <a href="#page140">140</a>.
+Suevi, <a href="#page215">215</a>.
+Sultanies, Turkish, names of, <a href="#page165">165</a>.
+Sunium, <a href="#page137">137</a>.
+Symbols, See <i>Hieroglyphics</i>.
+
+
+T
+
+Tables of Laws, Roman, <a href="#page214">214</a>.
+Talmage, T. DeWitt, quoted, <a href="#page363">363</a>, <a href=
+"#page412">412</a>.
+Temple of Reason, <a href="#page309">309</a>.
+Tertullian, <a href="#page107">107</a>;
+ quoted, <a href="#page134">134</a>, <a href=
+"#page224">224-226</a>.
+Tetzel, <a href="#page250">250</a>, <a href="#page251">251</a>.
+Theodoret, <a href="#page96">96</a>.
+Theodoric, <a href="#page148">148</a>, <a href="#page236">236</a>.
+Theodosius the Great, Roman emp., <a href=
+"#page136">136</a>, <a href="#page440">440</a>, <a href=
+"#footnote16">n</a>.
+Thermopylae, <a href="#page137">137</a>.
+Thrace, <a href="#page137">137</a>.
+Thuanus, quoted, <a href="#page200">200</a>.
+Thyatira, fate of, <a href="#page64">64</a>, <a href=
+"#page68">68</a>.
+Tiberius C&aelig;sar, Roman emp., <a href="#page66">66</a>.
+Tilsit, <a href="#page172">172</a>.
+Tmolus, Mount, <a href="#page56">56</a>.
+Toledo, council of, <a href="#page339">339</a>, <a href=
+"#page346">346</a>.
+Toloso, council of, <a href="#page339">339</a>.
+Torgaw, <a href="#page291">291</a>.
+Tournay, <a href="#page140">140</a>.
+Tours, <a href="#page161">161</a>;
+ council of, <a href="#page339">339</a>.
+Trajan, Roman emp., <a href="#page98">98</a>, <a href=
+"#page104">104</a>, <a href="#page222">222</a>.
+Trent, council of, <a href="#page96">96</a>.
+Tribunes, <a href="#page214">214</a>, also <a href=
+"#footnote8">n</a>.
+Tripoli, <a href="#page143">143</a>.
+Triumvirate, <a href="#page214">214</a>, also <a href=
+"#footnote8">n</a>., <a href="#page351">351</a>.
+Turenne, <a href="#page307">307</a>.
+Turin, <a href="#page199">199</a>.
+Turings, <a href="#page215">215</a>.
+Turks, See <i>Ottoman empire.</i>
+
+
+U
+
+Universal Bishop, Pope styled, See <i>Papacy.</i>
+Urban II., <a href="#page96">96</a>.
+
+
+V
+
+Valens, Roman emp., <a href="#page440">440</a>, also <a href=
+"#footnote16">n</a>.
+Valentinian, Roman emp., <a href="#page143">143</a>, <a href=
+"#page440">440</a>, also <a href="#footnote16">n</a>.
+Valerian, Roman emp., <a href="#page98">98</a>.
+Vandals, <a href="#page25">25</a>, <a href=
+"#page142">142</a>, <a href="#page143">143</a>, <a href=
+"#page215">215</a>.
+Vanosia, <a href="#page347">347</a>.
+Vatican, council of, <a href="#page346">346</a>.
+Vaudois, <a href="#page196">196</a>.
+Venaissin, <a href="#page327">327</a>.
+Venus, <a href="#page241">241</a>.
+Vicarius Filii Dei, blasphemous title of the Pope, <a href=
+"#page264">264</a>.
+Victor Emmanuel, <a href="#page255">255</a>, <a href=
+"#page328">328</a>.
+Victor III., Pope, <a href="#page345">345</a>.
+Vienna, attacked by Turks, <a href="#page169">169</a>;
+ congress of, <a href="#page323">323</a>.
+Visigoths, <a href="#page138">138</a>, <a href=
+"#page141">141</a>, <a href="#page146">146</a>, <a href=
+"#page215">215</a>.
+Voltaire, <a href="#page297">297-302</a>, <a href=
+"#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page306">306</a>, <a href=
+"#page401">401</a>.
+
+
+W
+
+Waddington, quoted, <a href="#page94">94</a>, <a href=
+"#page186">186</a>, <a href="#page346">346</a>, <a href=
+"#page347">347</a>.
+Wagram, battle of, <a href="#page322">322</a>.
+Waldenses, <a href="#page113">113</a>, <a href=
+"#page117">117</a>, <a href="#page161">161</a>, <a href=
+"#page196">196</a>, <a href="#page200">200</a>, <a href=
+"#page270">270</a>, <a href="#page339">339</a>, <a href=
+"#page342">342</a>.
+Warburton, quoted, <a href="#page404">404</a>.
+Waterloo, battle of, <a href="#page324">324</a>.
+Weishaupt, Dr. Adam, <a href="#page300">300</a>, <a href=
+"#page302">302</a>, <a href="#page403">403</a>.
+Wesley, John, <a href="#page368">368</a>.
+Western Empire, See <i>Roman Empire</i> also <i>Charlemagne</i>
+ and <i>Holy Roman Empire.</i>
+Westphalia, <a href="#page321">321</a>.
+Wicks, Thos., quoted, <a href="#page297">297-303</a>, <a href=
+"#page321">321</a>, <a href="#page323">323</a>.
+Wittemberg, <a href="#page248">248</a>, <a href="#page249">249</a>;
+ university of, <a href="#page251">251</a>.
+Wurms, <a href="#page140">140</a>.
+Wycliffe, <a href="#page61">61</a>, <a href=
+"#page340">340</a>, <a href="#page344">344</a>.
+
+
+X
+
+Xerxes, <a href="#page321">321</a>.
+
+
+Y
+
+Yellowstone Park, <a href="#page87">87</a>.
+Yosemite Valley, <a href="#page87">87</a>.
+Yuruks, <a href="#page58">58</a>.
+
+
+Z
+
+Zend-Avesta, <a href="#page406">406</a>.
+Zoroaster, <a href="#page406">406</a>.
+Zurich, <a href="#page292">292</a>.
+Zwingle, Ulrich, reformer, <a href="#page252">252</a>.
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/old/13229.txt b/old/13229.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7e9d1fb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/13229.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,13151 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Revelation Explained, by F. Smith
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Revelation Explained
+
+Author: F. Smith
+
+Release Date: August 20, 2004 [EBook #13229]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE REVELATION EXPLAINED ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joel Erikson, Christing Gehring, David King, and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+The Revelation Explained
+
+An Exposition, Text by Text,
+of the Apocalypse of St. John
+
+Showing the Marvelous Development of the Prophecies from the Time of
+their Delivery on the Isle of Patmos--The Establishment and Growth of
+Christianity--Rise of Mohammedanism in the Eastern Empire--Of the Papacy
+in the Western Division--Of Protestantism--The Civil History of the
+Territory Comprising the Ancient Roman Empire until the End of
+Time--Together with the Conflicts and Triumphs of the Redeemed until the
+Final Judgment, and their Eternal Reward and Home in the "New Heavens
+and New Earth."
+
+By F.G. SMITH
+
+Author of
+
+"What the Bible Teaches" and "The Last Reformation," etc.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Behold the former things are come to pass, and new things do I declare:
+before they spring forth I tell you of them." Isa. 42:9.
+
+"Surely the Lord God will do nothing, but he revealeth his secret unto
+his servants the prophets." Amos 3:7.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+The subject of prophecy should be of interest to every Bible student.
+Its importance can not be overestimated. By it we are enabled to
+ascertain our true position in this time-world. From the early dawn of
+creation, Inspiration has foretold with certainty the great facts
+connected with the history of God's chosen people. By this means alone,
+the divinity of Jesus Christ and the truth of our holy religion has been
+established in many minds; for it is not in the power of mortals thus to
+vaticinate future events. With such surprising accuracy have these
+predictions been fulfilled that even infidels ofttimes bear witness to
+their truthfulness. "Behold the former things are come to pass, and new
+things do I declare: before they spring forth I tell you of them." Isa.
+42:9. "For I am God, and there is none else; I am God, and there is none
+like me, declaring the end from the beginning, and from ancient times
+the things that are not yet done." Isa. 46:9, 10.
+
+The Revelation is a rich mine of prophetic truth. The history of the
+current dispensation is there delineated in advance so perfectly that we
+can not but attribute its authorship to Him who knoweth the end from the
+beginning, and worketh all things after the counsel of his own will. It
+was written for the special benefit of the people of God, and we should
+give it prayerful consideration.
+
+In the preparation for this work, I have gleaned historical information
+from all the general and ecclesiastical histories, encyclopedias, etc.,
+within my reach, and only regret that I had not access to a still
+greater number. However, knowing that large books are seldom read, I
+determined in advance not to write an extensive work, but to condense
+the subject matter as much as possible, and, therefore, I have been
+obliged to omit much valuable material previously gathered. For this
+reason many lines of prophetic truth penned by others of the sacred
+writers have been passed over in silence, even though relating to the
+same events as certain symbolic visions in the Revelation.
+
+I have availed myself of all the helps and the commentaries within my
+reach in the study of this important subject. However, I have but seldom
+referred to the opinions of expositors. In most cases their explanations
+are not based upon any established rule of interpretation, and the
+definite laws of symbolic language are usually overlooked or
+disregarded. Ordinary readers of the Revelation have always supposed
+that the only course for them was to take the opinion of some learned
+expositor and to believe on _his authority_; and when they have found
+that equally learned and judicious men sustained the most opposite
+views, they have been bewildered amid conflicting opinions and have
+decided that, when such men were at issue, it was useless for them to
+investigate. While, therefore, I have made every available use of their
+opinions, it was only for the purpose of forming my own and of enabling
+myself so to unfold the nature of the symbols that every one might see
+for himself the propriety of the interpretation given.
+
+The present knowledge that has been attained of this prophetic book is
+largely the result of the combined efforts of all who have labored to
+unfold its meaning. No one has had the honor of first understanding all
+its parts, and very few have failed to contribute something, more or
+less, to its true interpretation. Therefore I have endeavored as much as
+possible to gather up the good from the labors of my predecessors and to
+combine it with the results of my own study and research. The Exposition
+of Mr. Lord has had an important bearing on this work. For many
+beautiful thoughts concerning the nature and the use of symbols, in the
+chapter on the nature of symbolic language, I must acknowledge special
+indebtedness to the Lectures of Thomas Wickes on the Apocalypse,
+delivered many years ago, although I have ofttimes arrived at quite
+different conclusions in their interpretation throughout the Revelation.
+Much appreciated assistance has been derived from the works of other
+commentators as well.
+
+There is considerable disagreement among historians themselves regarding
+certain historical points, but their differences are of minor importance
+so far as the present work is concerned. When such points were involved,
+I have simply endeavored to follow the best authorities. Lengthy or
+important quotations from other writers have been duly credited where
+they appear, hence no special mention is necessary in this place. Minor
+extracts are merely enclosed within quotation-marks.
+
+The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, 6 Vols., Philadelphia, 1872,
+is the edition of Gibbon's Rome from which quotations are made.
+
+To assist in simplifying the subject and in placing it before the reader
+in a concise, comprehensive manner, a number of useful diagrams have
+been added; for they serve about the same purpose in the study of a
+subject so complicated as do maps in the study of geography. I would
+especially call attention to the large "Diagram of the Revelation,"
+where the various lines of prophetic truth are outlined in parallel
+series, enabling the reader to comprehend at once where the symbolic
+narrative returns to take up a new line of thought covering the same
+period of time. In these diagrams, however, no attempt has been made to
+set forth every phase of thought connected with the subject; only the
+main features have been outlined.
+
+Feeling directed by the Lord to undertake this work and realizing the
+greatness of the task, I have earnestly sought for divine wisdom and
+guidance, and I humbly acknowledge his gracious assistance in its
+prosecution; and while I can not indulge the hope that human fallibility
+has been overcome, yet I firmly believe that a careful reliance upon the
+Holy Spirit has been an effectual means of avoiding error and unfolding
+many of the hitherto mysterious prophecies of this wonderful book. To
+his worthy name I ascribe all praise and glory. The future, doubtless,
+will witness a still greater development of this subject; for men of God
+more worthy and possessing greater abilities will arise, who, beginning
+where we have left off, will continue its investigation and throw upon
+it additional light as yet unrevealed.
+
+That the Lord will bless The Revelation Explained to the good of his
+church upon earth and grant it a place, however small, in the cause of
+present truth, is my earnest prayer.
+
+Yours in Christ,
+F.G. Smith.
+_Grand Junction, Mich., June 26, 1906_.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO FOURTH EDITION
+
+
+The reception accorded this work when it was first submitted to the
+public was more than gratifying to the author. The lapse of time has
+only tended to confirm still more strongly the fundamental nature of the
+principle of interpretation adopted. In order to supply the constant
+demand, the fourth edition is now issued.
+
+I have taken advantage of this opportunity to make certain revisions
+necessitated by an increase of knowledge since the work was first
+written, nearly twelve years ago. This revision, however, did not
+require an entire re-writing and does not involve a change in
+fundamentals.
+
+F.G. Smith.
+_Anderson, Ind., Mar. 1, 1918_.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+Preface
+Nature of Symbolic Language
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+Introduction, verses 1-11
+Vision of Christ, verses 12-20
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Message to Ephesus, verses 1-7
+Message to Smyrna, verses 8-11
+Message to Pergamus, verses 12-17
+Message to Thyatira, verses 18-29
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+Message to Sardis, verses 1-6
+Message to Philadelphia, verses 7-13
+Message to Laodicea, verses 14-22
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Vision of God's Throne
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+The Book with Seven Seals
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+First Seal Opened, verses 1, 2
+Second Seal Opened, verses 3, 4
+Third Seal Opened, verses 5, 6
+Fourth Seal Opened, verses 7, 8
+Fifth Seal Opened, verses 9-11
+Sixth Seal Opened, verses 12-17
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+God's Servants Sealed, verses 1-8
+The White-Robed Company, verses 9-17
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+Seventh Seal Opened, verses 1-5
+First Trumpet Sounded, verses 6, 7
+Second Trumpet Sounded, verses 8, 9
+Third Trumpet Sounded, verses 10, 11
+Fourth Trumpet Sounded, verses 12, 13
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+Fifth Trumpet Sounded, verses 1-12
+Sixth Trumpet Sounded, verses 13-21
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+The Rainbow Angel
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+Temple and Holy City, verses 1, 2
+The Two Witnesses, verses 3-6
+The Witnesses Slain, verses 7-10
+The Witnesses Resurrected, verses 11-14
+Seventh Trumpet Sounded, verses 15-19
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+Woman and Man-Child, verses 1-6
+Michael and the Dragon, verses 7-12
+The Woman's Flight, verses 13-17
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+The Leopard Beast, verses 1-9
+"The Faith of the Saints," verse 10
+The Two-Horned Beast, verses 11-18
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+The 144,000 on Mount Sion, verses 1-5
+The Three Angels, verses 6-11
+"The Patience of the Saints," verses 12, 13
+Harvest of the World, verses 14-20
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+Seven Last Plagues
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+The First Vial, verses 1, 2
+The Second Vial, verse 3
+The Third Vial, verses 4-7
+The Fourth Vial, verses 8, 9
+The Fifth Vial, verses 10, 11
+The Sixth Vial, verses 12-16
+The Seventh Vial, verses 17-21
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+"Babylon the Great," verses 1-6
+Beast and Ten Kingdoms, verses 7-18
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+Fall of Babylon
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+Marriage of the Lamb, verses 1-10
+Coming of Christ, verses 11-21
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+The Dragon Bound, verses 1-6
+The Dragon Released, verses 7-10
+The Judgment Scene, verses 11-15
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+New Heaven and Earth, verses 1-8
+The Heavenly Jerusalem, verses 9-27
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+River and Tree of Life, verses 1-5
+Christ's Coming and Eternity, verses 6-21
+
+
+
+
+Nature of Symbolic Language.
+
+
+Before proceeding with the interpretation of this wonderful book, it
+will be necessary for us to pause and make inquiry concerning the nature
+of the language employed in its prophecies and concerning the mode of
+its interpretation. It will be seen at a glance that it is wholly unlike
+the common language of life; and it will be useless for us to undertake
+to ascertain its signification unless we understand perfectly the
+principles upon which it is founded.
+
+The question may be asked, "Is the language intelligible at all?"
+Considering the variety of interpretations placed upon it by expositors
+and the opinions generally held respecting it, we might conclude that it
+is not. The majority of the people look upon these prophecies as "a mass
+of unintelligible enigmas," and are ready to tell the student of
+Revelation that this book "either finds or leaves a man mad." But are we
+to look upon its language as being applied at a venture, without any
+definite rule, capable of every variety of meaning, so that we can never
+be quite _sure_ that we have its correct interpretation?
+
+Commentators generally unite in attaching a definite meaning to certain
+symbols, and they tell us that these can not be applied otherwise
+without violating their nature. They may not give us their reasons for
+thus applying them (in fact, they generally do not), yet it is evidently
+assumed that such reasons do exist. Now, if reasons actually exist why a
+definite signification must be applied to the symbol in the one case,
+why do they not exist in another case, and in all cases? If any law
+exists in the case at all, it is a uniform one, for a law that does not
+possess uniformity is no law; otherwise, it would be an unintelligible
+revelation, and the only possible thing left for us to do would be to
+attempt to solve it like a riddle--guess it out. It would be as if the
+writer were to use words with every variety of meaning peculiarly his
+own attached, without informing the reader what signification to give
+them in a given instance. No man has a right thus to abuse written or
+spoken language; and we may take it for granted that the God of heaven
+would not make such an indiscriminate use of symbolical language when
+making a revelation to men. There is no other book the wide world around
+in which language is as carefully employed as in the Bible; and we can
+rest assured that when God gave this Revelation to Jesus Christ "to
+_show_ unto his servants things which must shortly come to pass," he
+made choice of proper symbols whose meaning can be definitely evolved,
+provided we can but ascertain the great underlying principles upon which
+their original selection was based.
+
+In the ordinary communication of our thoughts we employ arbitrary signs
+and sounds to which we have universally agreed to fix a definite
+meaning. Thus, our entire spoken language is made up of a great variety
+of sounds or words with which by long practise we have become familiar.
+We call a certain object a horse, not because there is any similarity
+between the sound and the animal designated, but because we have agreed
+that that sound shall represent that object. So, also, we have agreed
+that the characters h-o-r-s-e shall represent the same thing; and by the
+use of twenty-six characters, called the alphabet, placed together in
+various combinations, we are able to write our entire spoken language.
+
+The incidents connected with the introduction of written language among
+a barbarous people are worthy of remark in this connection. That thought
+can be conveyed to persons at a distance by the use of certain
+cabalistic characters seems to them incredible, and when compelled to
+believe it, they look upon the person that can accomplish such wonders
+as embodying something supernatural. These things I mention merely to
+call attention to the fact that spoken and written language is a curious
+and wonderfully complicated affair. This is brought forcibly to our
+minds when we hear persons conversing in a foreign tongue, or when we
+pick up a book the characters of which are wholly unlike those of our
+own language. To us an English book is full of instinctive beauty, every
+letter or mark possessing a definite meaning that is instantly conveyed
+to our minds, because we have become familiar with them by diligent
+study and practise.
+
+There are other ways of transferring thought besides the complicated
+system just mentioned--ways which are much more natural and simple.
+Thus, a simpler way to represent a certain object would be to draw a
+picture of it; or, better still, to represent a certain character or
+quality by exhibiting, not the object itself, but an analagous one whose
+peculiar character that property is; for examples: the quiet, peaceful,
+gentle disposition of a child, by a lamb; a man of cunning, artful,
+deceptive disposition, by a fox; or a cruel, bloodthirsty, vindictive
+tyrant, by a tiger, etc. This is hieroglyphical or symbolic language.
+This language takes precedence over every other for naturalness and
+simplicity, being common to a greater or less extent among all nations
+and intelligible to all.
+
+Spoken language was undoubtedly a gift from God originally, while
+written language is probably a mere human invention. We are not to
+suppose that the first attempts to convey thought in writing would be by
+an alphabetical system, but by the symbolic, it being, as before stated,
+the most natural and within reach of the ordinary ingenuity of man. This
+is proved by the fact that the inscriptions on the ancient monuments of
+Egypt and the inscriptions of other nations of antiquity are of this
+character. It is also a fact worthy of notice that, four thousand years
+later, men of other countries and of other languages have, by much study
+and a careful comparison of the symbols, been able to decipher with
+accuracy those hierographical representations.[1] This of itself is
+sufficient to establish the point that definiteness can be attached to
+the use and the interpretation of carefully-selected symbols, when the
+principles that governed their original selection are discovered.
+
+[Footnote 1: The systems of hieroglyphical writing employed by various
+nations have, for the most part, remained unintelligible until a key of
+their interpretation was discovered. In 1799 M. Bouchard, a French
+captain of engineers, while digging intrenchments on the site of an old
+temple near the Rosetta mouth of the Nile, unearthed a black stone
+containing a trilingual inscription in hieroglyphics, demotic
+characters, and Greek. The last paragraph of the Greek inscription
+stated that two translations, one in the sacred and the other in the
+popular Egyptian language, would be found adjacent; hence this
+celebrated stone has afforded European scholars a key to the language
+and writing of the ancient Egyptians. The cuneiform writing of the
+Babylonians and Persians remained a mystery also until modern times, but
+great progress has now been made in the deciphering of thousands of
+inscribed clay tablets, cylinders, prisms, etc. The key to its
+interpretation is the celebrated inscription at Behistun, cut upon the
+face of a high rock three hundred feet above its base, and recording a
+portion of the history of Darius. It is written in the cuneiform
+characters, in three languages--Median, Persian, and Assyrian.]
+
+I do not wish to be understood as implying that the symbolical language
+of Scripture is identical with the hieroglyphics of ancient monuments.
+There may be different kinds of symbolic representations; but they are
+not arbitrary, as is spoken language, and can not be arbitrarily
+applied; a fixed law governs them all.
+
+Now, the book of Revelation is made up of this symbolic language. It is
+not, however, confined to this book alone. There are many instances of
+it to be found elsewhere in the sacred volume, and in many cases it is
+explained by inspiration itself, thus giving us a reliable key to the
+whole. Joseph's dream of the eleven sheaves that made obeisance to his
+sheaf was of this description (Gen. 37:7, 8), and his eleven brethren
+were angered, because its meaning was apparent--that they should be
+humbled before him. Also, his dream of the sun, the moon, and the eleven
+stars (verses 9, 10) was understood to signify the subjection of the
+entire family unto him, which was actually fulfilled after Joseph's
+exaltation in Egypt. The chief butler's dream of the vine with three
+branches bearing grapes, which he took and pressed into the king's cup,
+was interpretated by Joseph as signifying the butler's restoration in
+three days to his former position of cup-bearer to the king; while the
+chief baker's dream of the three baskets upon his head, out of which the
+birds ate, was interpretated as signifying his execution in the same
+length of time. Gen. 40. Pharaoh's dream of the seven fat kine and the
+seven lean kine, also of the seven full ears and the seven thin ears,
+signified seven years of plenty and seven years of famine. Gen. 41.
+
+Again, the four divisions of King Nebuchadnezzar's wonderful image was
+explained by Daniel as signifying four universal monarchies and the ten
+toes as signifying the ten minor kingdoms which grew out of the fourth;
+while the stone that was cut out of the mountain without human
+intervention he interpreted as signifying the divine kingdom of God.
+Dan. 2. The two-horned ram of Daniel's vision (chap. 8), according to
+the explanation of the angel, symbolized the Medo-Persian empire, its
+two horns signifying the two dynasties of allied kings that composed it.
+The he-goat signified the Greco-Macedonian empire; his great horn, its
+first mighty king; and the four horns that replaced the great one when
+broken represented four kings under whom the empire would eventually be
+divided into as many parts. In the Apocalypse itself we have a number of
+symbols divinely interpreted, "The seven stars are the angels of the
+seven churches." "The seven candle-sticks which thou sawest are the
+seven churches." "The ten horns which thou sawest are ten kings." "The
+waters which thou sawest ... are peoples, and multitudes, and nations,
+and tongues." "The woman which thou sawest is that great city which
+reigneth over the kings of the earth," etc.
+
+It will be seen that the great underlying principle or _law_ upon which
+symbolic language is based is ANALOGY. An object is chosen to represent
+not itself, but something of analagous character.
+
+Webster defines _symbol_ as follows: "The sign or representation of any
+moral thing by the images or properties of natural things. Thus, a lion
+is the _symbol_ of courage; the lamb is the _symbol_ of meekness or
+patience." Home, in his Introduction to the Study of the Bible, says:
+"By symbols we mean certain representative marks, rather than express
+pictures; or, if pictures, such as were at the time _characters_, and
+besides presenting to the eye the resemblance of a particular object,
+suggested a general idea to the mind, as when a _horn_ was made to
+denote _strength_, an _eye_ and _scepter, majesty_, and in numberless
+such instances; where the picture was not drawn to express merely the
+thing itself, but something else, which was, or was conceived to be,
+analagous to it." The main idea, then, as expressed in the foregoing
+definitions, is the representation of an object, not by a picture of
+itself, but by something analagous, such as the exhibition of moral
+qualities by images drawn from nature. But the use of symbols is not
+confined to the representation of moral subjects alone. Anything may be
+symbolized to which a corresponding analagous object can be found.
+
+To establish the principle of analogy here laid down, it will be
+necessary to refer only to a few of the numerous examples of divinely
+interpreted symbols in the Scriptures. Any one can readily perceive the
+analogy between the seven fat kine of Pharaoh's dream and as many years
+of plenty; so, also, with the seven full, healthy ears that grew up on
+seven stalks. Likewise, the analogy between the seven thin kine and as
+many years of famine, and the seven thin, blasted ears that represented
+the same thing, is apparent. One fat kine or one full ear would
+symbolize one year of plenty, when crops were abundant; while seven
+would represent as many distinct seasons of prosperity, etc. Kine do not
+represent kine, but something analagous. The beasts of Daniel's visions
+do not represent animals like themselves, or a multitude of such
+animals, but something of analagous disposition. The analogy between a
+wild, ferocious beast, stamping upon or devouring everything within its
+reach, and a cruel, persecuting, tyrannical government is apparent. A
+horn does not signify a horn, but some great power, such as a dynasty of
+kings or rulers; and what the horn is to the animal in manifesting its
+desolating disposition, kings and rulers are to an empire in executing
+the persecuting or oppressive principles of the body politic. A pure,
+chaste virgin is used to symbolize the true church of God; whereas a
+corrupt harlot is chosen to represent an apostate church, and
+fornication her idolatrous worship.
+
+Although this principle is worthy of further elucidation, yet enough has
+been said to firmly establish the point that symbolic language is
+founded upon analogy. It is also clear that, whenever we attach a
+literal signification to a symbolic object, we immediately destroy
+entirely its use as a symbol. So we may accept it as one established
+landmark in the interpretation of the Apocalypse, that every symbol,
+regardless of the department from which it is taken--whether from the
+material universe, the animal kingdom, human life or the heavenly
+realm--stands as the representative, not of itself, but of some other
+object of analagous character not found in the same department from
+which it is drawn.
+
+This develops another important fact worthy of attention. If the great
+law of symbolic language is based upon analogy, it is clear to a
+demonstration that the symbols employed _must be_ definitely applied.
+They can not be arbitrary, as the words composing our spoken language
+are. There is nothing in the nature of the thing to prevent our calling
+a horse an elephant, provided we had only agreed universally to adopt
+that designation of the animal referred to (arbitrary sounds can be
+arbitrarily applied); but we violate nature when we attempt to make a
+ferocious tiger the symbol of an innocent child, or represent a
+blood-thirsty tyrant by the symbol of a lamb. A disgusting, polluted
+harlot may be the proper symbol of an apostate church, but of the pure,
+holy church of God--_never_. A proper correspondence must be kept up. We
+must follow nature strictly.
+
+Symbols are drawn from every department--from animate and inanimate
+creation, from animal life and human life, from the visible universe
+below and the heavenly world above, and also from some objects of fancy
+to which there is no corresponding object in existence, such as Daniel's
+four-headed beast, or the one in the Revelator's vision with seven heads
+and ten horns; but in the selection of the same a proper correspondence
+of quality is kept up. The symbols that are chosen to set forth the
+great spiritual affairs of the church are such as are in themselves
+nobler than those selected to describe the political affairs of kings
+and empires, because in the divine estimation the church is of
+infinitely greater importance and occupies a more honorable position
+than worldly kingdoms. Thus, a beautiful virgin bride is chosen to
+represent the church of God; whereas a great red dragon with seven heads
+and ten horns is chosen to symbolize the Pagan Roman empire. The
+glorious body of God's reformers is set forth under the symbol of an
+angel from heaven, with his face as the sun, his feet as pillars of
+fire, and a rainbow upon his head; whereas the Saracen warriors of
+Mahomet are locusts upon the earth, with stings of scorpions. The
+department of human and angelic life is chosen to set forth the
+spiritual affairs of the church, while the department of nature and of
+animal life represents the political affairs of nations. To this general
+rule, there is at least one exception. Certain things connected with
+God's chosen people under the old dispensation are considered proper
+symbols to represent similar things or events in the New Testament
+dispensation, without special regard to the department from which they
+are drawn. Thus, the temple, altar, incense, candlesticks, holy city,
+etc., of the former age, though not taken from the department of human
+or angelic life, are, nevertheless, clearly used to represent affairs of
+the church, the analogy in the case being apparent because of their
+former prominence as connected with the Lord's covenant people.
+
+Again, when the symbol selected is that of a living, active, intelligent
+agent, it represents an analagous intelligent agent. Likewise, the
+actions of the former plainly denote analagous actions in the latter,
+and the effects produced by the actions of the symbolic agent signify
+analagous effects produced by the actions of the agent symbolized. To
+make it clearer: agents symbolize agents, actions symbolize actions, and
+effects symbolize effects. If this be not true--if agents can symbolize
+actions and effects as well as agents, or if actions can symbolize
+agents and effects--then all is an inextricable maze of confusion, and
+well may we repeat the words uttered by a certain minister to the
+writer, "The book should have been called Mystification, not
+Revelation."
+
+The same principle of analogy is carried out in another particular.
+Whenever the enemies of God or destructive agents are intended, objects
+of a corresponding desolating character are chosen as their symbols;
+whereas the peaceful triumphs of the cross, as exhibited by God's chosen
+people, are described under symbols of an equally benign and gentle
+character. Thus, the anti-christian, persecuting power of Rome is
+described as a ferocious wild beast, stamping everything beneath its
+feet and spreading desolation on every side. The Vandal hordes of
+Northern barbarians, who, under Genseric overran the Western Roman
+empire early in the fifth century, are symbolized by a volcanic mountain
+cast into the sea and spreading its streams of molten lava in every
+direction. The fearful pest of Mohammedanism is a dense smoke issuing
+from the bottomless pit and darkening the heavens. The Saracens of
+Mahomet are swarms of locusts appearing upon the earth, with scorpion
+stings, tormenting men five months, or, prophetically, one hundred and
+fifty years. On the other hand, a church is a candle-stick; its pastor,
+a beautiful star; the whole church, a virgin bride; the glorious
+assembly of God's reformers, a rainbow angel, etc.
+
+From the foregoing it will be seen that symbols are not words, but
+things, chosen because of some analagous resemblance to represent other
+things; and by a careful study of the nature of the symbols themselves
+we can ascertain where to look for their fulfilment. In the present work
+no attempt has been made to prove the interpretations given merely by
+the authority of learned names (for they can be arrayed on every side of
+a passage), but the nature of the symbols themselves has been developed;
+and the reader will be able to judge how nearly the known laws of
+symbolic language have been followed.
+
+It will be necessary, however, to notice another exception to the rules
+given, although it can scarcely be said to form an exception--it rather
+proves the very position taken. Undoubtedly, there are some few objects
+whose nature forbids their symbolization, there being no object in
+existence of analagous character that can be chosen as their
+representative. God, evidently, can not be symbolized; for where is the
+individual in heaven or on earth that can stand as his representative?
+"To whom then will ye liken God? or what likeness will ye compare unto
+him?" Isa. 40:18. Man can not represent him, angels can not; for
+whenever they appear on the panoramic scene, they denote distinguished
+agencies among men. There may be certain symbols connected with his
+person, setting forth his divine attributes and proclaiming the eternal
+majesty of his name; but he himself is described as "One sitting upon a
+throne," before whom the created intelligences of earth and heaven fall
+down and worship unceasingly, but no symbol of Him is given. The same
+exception also applies to the person of Jesus, our Savior and Redeemer.
+While the human aspect of the Savior, as exhibited during the
+incarnation in his sacrificial death, may be properly symbolized by a
+lamb, as in chap. V, there is no created intelligence in God's great
+universe that can be chosen to represent, in his true, essential
+divinity, Him who does not deem it robbery to claim equality with God.
+There may, likewise, be certain symbols connected with his person to
+give us at least a faint impression of his divine character and infinite
+majesty; yet when he appears upon the symbolic scene, he distinctly
+announces, "I am the first and the last: I am he that liveth, and was
+dead; and, behold, I am alive forevermore." "He hath on his vesture and
+on his thigh a name written, KING OF KINGS, AND LORD OF LORDS." So
+whenever the divine Christ appears on the symbolic scene, he comes in
+his own person, proclaiming his own name, and we need look for no symbol
+of him.
+
+Upon the opening of the fifth seal, the souls of the martyrs are
+represented as crying unto God from the altar for the avenging of their
+blood on those who dwell on the earth. Where is there an object in all
+creation analagous to a disembodied spirit? None can be found. It is
+easy to give them an arbitrary name; therefore they appear in the
+Revelation under their own appropriate title, as "the _souls_ of them
+that were slain." Chap. 6:9, 10, also 20:4.
+
+This exception applies to every case where no corresponding object can
+be selected as a symbol. Where the nature of the subject forbids its
+symbolization, there the description must of necessity be literal, and
+all such objects appear under their own appropriate titles. Otherwise,
+we are to look upon the entire book of Revelation as a vast collection
+of symbols whose interpretation is to be found, not in the department
+from which they are taken, but in another, to which they bear a certain
+analagous resemblance.
+
+Although not pertaining strictly to the subject of symbolic language,
+yet a word respecting the plan of the prophecy will be appropriate at
+this time. The prophetic events are not arranged after the ordinary plan
+of histories, narrating all the contemporaneous events in a given
+period, whether civil, religious, literary, scientific, or biographical,
+thus finishing up the history of that period; but it consists of a
+number of distinct themes running over the same ground. The proof of
+this assertion will appear as we proceed with the development of the
+prophecies.
+
+May the wisdom of heaven direct us in the perusal of this wonderful book
+of Revelation, and may we at last be "accounted worthy to obtain that
+world," and the glorious privilege of rendering eternal praise to "Him
+that sitteth upon the throne," "upholding all things by the word of his
+power," "declaring the end from the beginning," and revealing his mighty
+works unto the children of men.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+ The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave unto him, to show
+ unto his servants things which must shortly come to pass; and he
+ sent and signified it by his angel unto his servant John:
+
+ 2. Who bare record of the word of God, and of the testimony of
+ Jesus Christ, and of all things that he saw.
+
+ 3. Blessed is he that readeth, and they that hear the words of
+ this prophecy, and keep those things which are written therein:
+ for the time is at hand.
+
+This book of the Revelation is frequently styled the Apocalypse, derived
+from the word by which it is designated in Greek. Jesus Christ having
+received it from God, its author, designed it for the future benefit of
+his church, and communicated it to his servants by the hand of the
+beloved apostle John. Its character is described by its title
+"Revelation," which signifies something revealed or made known; and its
+object was to "show unto his servants things which must shortly come to
+pass." This object of God's in delivering the Revelation to his church
+should be a sufficient refutation of the popular theory that this book
+is unintelligible, and its varied symbols wrapped in such deep mystery
+that their meaning can not be evolved; for it is not consonant with the
+supreme power and wisdom of the God-head to suppose that, in making a
+revelation to man, he would make the fatal mistake of clothing his
+language with a mystery that defies the intellect of mortals to unveil.
+It is said of the things herein revealed that they "must shortly come to
+pass," by which is meant not that they were all to be completely
+fulfilled within a short time, but that the series of special events
+predicted were soon to begin. Thus, we speak of a century or eternity as
+near at hand, by which we mean that the events of the period spoken of
+are about to commence, although the end of the series may be very far
+off.
+
+But who are "his servants"? For whose benefit was the Revelation given?
+Surely it was for all those who become children of God by faith in
+Christ Jesus, from the beginning of the gospel dispensation when it was
+given, until the end of time; for a benediction is pronounced upon _all_
+those who read and hear its prophecies and "keep those things which are
+written therein." It was this promised blessing unto the earnest
+inquirers into the truths of Revelation that enabled the writer to
+decide to give these prophecies the consideration that is justly their
+due, and to recognize their infinite importance to the present church;
+"for the time is at hand" that will close the series of events herein
+predicted and usher in eternity. Every fulfilment of prophecy brings
+with it new duties, and enjoins fresh responsibilities upon the people
+of God; yea, "every revolving century, every closing year, adds to the
+urgency with which attention is challenged to the concluding portion of
+Holy Writ." Daniel prophetically described some of the events contained
+also in the Apocalypse, but he was told to shut up the words and seal
+the book _until_ the time of the end, when "many shall run to and fro,
+and knowledge shall be increased."
+
+It has been a matter of conjecture as to who the angel or messenger was
+that Christ sent to deliver the prophecies to John. Some suppose it to
+have been Gabriel, because of his having been a chosen instrument to
+deliver similar prophecies to Daniel. Some think it was Elijah, he
+having been translated that he should not see death, and afterwards
+appearing on the mount of transfiguration. Others think it was one of
+the redeemed sons of earth; because afterward, when rejecting the
+worship John was about to tender him, he says, "See thou do it not: I am
+thy fellow-servant, and of thy brethren that have the testimony of
+Jesus: worship God." Chaps. 19:10; 22:9. But we can not identify this
+messenger positively, as no definite information is given. To these
+revelations received John bore a faithful record of all things that he
+_saw_, implying the fact that they passed in vision before him and he
+beheld them as in a picture.
+
+ 4. JOHN to the seven churches which are in Asia: Grace be unto
+ you, and peace, from him which is, and which was, and which is
+ to come; and from the seven Spirits which are before his throne;
+
+ 5. And from Jesus Christ, who is the faithful witness, and the
+ first begotten of the dead, and the prince of the kings of the
+ earth. Unto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in
+ his own blood,
+
+ 6. And hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father;
+ to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen.
+
+ 7. Behold, he cometh with clouds; and every eye shall see him,
+ and they also which pierced him: and all kindreds of the earth
+ shall wail because of him. Even so, Amen.
+
+ 8. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending, saith the
+ Lord, which is, and which was, and which is to come, the
+ Almighty.
+
+The Apocalypse opens with the salutation of John to the seven churches
+in Asia, unto whom it was particularly addressed, and for whom special
+messages were prepared. There were other congregations of the church of
+God in Asia, or Asia Minor, besides the seven to whom the Revelation was
+sent, such as Colosse, Miletus, Troas, etc. Why only seven were
+addressed, we do not know, unless it be that the number seven is used,
+as elsewhere in the Sacred Volume, to denote fulness or completeness,
+being, as has been said, "a kind of memorial of the great facts of the
+first seven days of time which have divided all ages into cycles of
+weeks." So when we read of Christ's walking in the midst of the seven
+churches, we are to understand that he is in all the congregations of
+his people; and the ministers of the seven churches who are upheld by
+the Lord himself are representative, in one important sense at least, of
+the entire Christian ministry; for Christ has promised to be with them
+alway "even unto the end of the world." Mat. 28:20.
+
+This salutation of John's is one of great beauty and splendor, setting
+forth, as it does, the divine attributes of the great Jehovah in a
+striking manner as he "which is, and which was, and which is to come,"
+an expression embracing eternity and designating the eternal,
+unchangeable God. The seven spirits before his throne describe the third
+person in the Trinity, as will appear clearer hereafter, seven being
+used as a sacred or perfect number designating his dignity and
+excellence. Some have supposed that seven angelic spirits were here
+described; but it is not consistent with the honor due the God-head to
+suppose that created intelligences should be exalted to a plane of
+equality with the supreme Deity. Moreover, they would probably have been
+described as seven _angels_, and not as seven _spirits_.
+
+Jesus Christ is mentioned next and more fully described, he being the
+direct author of the Revelation. He is "the first begotten of the dead,
+the prince of the kings of the earth," and the one "that loved us, and
+washed us from our sins in his own blood." The statement that Christ is
+the "first-begotten of the dead," is parallel to similar expressions in
+the Bible, where he is declared to be "the first-fruits of them that
+slept," "and the first-born from the dead." Though others had been
+restored to life before the resurrection of Christ, yet he was the first
+to rise with an immortal, glorified body. These expressions may also
+denote that Christ was the chief or central figure among all those who
+arose. But it was by virtue of his coming and of his victory over death
+that any were enabled to rise before his resurrection, as in the mind
+and purpose of God, who "calleth those things which be not as though
+they were" (Rom. 4:17), Christ was ordained to die and rise again, from
+the foundation of the world. He is the "prince of the kings of the
+earth" by virtue of his being exalted to the right hand of God, with
+"angels and authorities and powers being made subject unto him." 1 Pet.
+3:22. "Far above all principality, and power, and might, and dominion,
+and every name that is named, not only in this world, but also in that
+which is to come." Eph. 1:21.
+
+"Unto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own blood,"
+describes the great atonement work of Jesus Christ, by which we are
+cleansed from all sin and made a royal, kingly priesthood unto God even
+in this world. Every soul that has received the blessed experience John
+here describes will be able to appreciate the unbounded rapture the
+beloved apostle felt in the contemplation of this wonderful theme of
+redemption that caused him to ascribe to God, its author, "glory and
+dominion forever and ever."
+
+This Jesus is he who will come again, not in humiliation and suffering,
+but in glory and honor; not as a Lamb to shed his blood for the sins of
+the world, but as the Lion of the tribe of Juda, with infinite power and
+majesty, causing all the kindreds of earth to wail because of him. The
+blasphemous Jews, who clamored for his crucifixion; Pilate, who
+delivered him up; and the Roman soldiery, who drove the nails and
+pierced his side, producing a death of greatest ignominy--all will see
+him when he comes. But while the proud enemies of God and the cruel
+oppressors of his saints are overwhelmed with terror at the sight of His
+person, the saints of all ages will shout for joy, saying, "Even so.
+Amen." "The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether." In
+the face of this awful truth, how dare men assert that the second advent
+will usher in a thousand years of peace and tranquility, during which
+time the wicked will lie in their graves, when God's word declares that
+_every eye_ shall see him when he comes?
+
+The present description of Christ closes with the statement that he is
+the Alpha and the Omega, which, being the first and last letters of the
+Greek alphabet, mean the same as "the beginning and the ending"; while
+the whole concludes with the statement that he is the one "which is, and
+which was, and which is to come, the Almighty"--which is the same as the
+description given of God in verse 4. Nothing in addition to this could
+be ascribed to Christ. Every attribute with which the Deity himself is
+invested is here ascribed to Jesus Christ. If our Savior is anything
+more than this description declares him to be, it is beyond the reach of
+our finite minds to comprehend. The sacred writers everywhere speak of
+him as a being worthy of worship and praise; and this fact, taken in
+connection with the universal proneness of men to take the honor from
+God and to give it to those who are no gods, is a convincing proof that
+Christ is God and, as such, is worthy of all honor and praise; and
+nowhere is there given in regard to Christ a warning caution such as
+John received from the angel at whose feet he fell to worship--"See thou
+do it not ... worship God."
+
+ 9. I John, who also am your brother, and companion in
+ tribulation, and in the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ,
+ was in the isle that is called Patmos, for the word of God, and
+ for the testimony of Jesus Christ.
+
+ 10. I was in the Spirit on the Lord's day, and heard behind me a
+ great voice, as of a trumpet,
+
+ 11. Saying, I am Alpha and Omega, the first and the last: and,
+ What thou seest, write in a book, and send it unto the seven
+ churches which are in Asia; unto Ephesus, and unto Smyrna, and
+ unto Pergamos, and unto Thyatira, and unto Sardis, and unto
+ Philadelphia, and unto Laodicea.
+
+At the time the Revelation was given, John was a prisoner in the Isle of
+Patmos (now called Patmo or Patino), a small, desolate, rocky island in
+the Aegean sea, near the coast of Asia Minor, its greatest length from
+north to south being about ten miles, and its greatest breadth six. To
+this lonely place, according to Jerome and others, John was exiled
+during the reign of the tyrant Domitian, in A.D. 95. The reason of his
+banishment is given--"For the word of God, and for the testimony of
+Jesus Christ." Having confined him to this barren spot, the emperor no
+doubt thought he had effectually cleared the world of this preacher of
+righteousness. Doubtless the persecutors of John Bunyan[2] thought the
+same when they had him shut up in Bedford jail. But when men think the
+truth is dead and buried out of sight, God suddenly gives it a
+resurrection with thirty-fold greater glory. It was so in this case. The
+giving of the book of Revelation--the writing on this spot of the
+history of the church in advance--has changed the name of this rocky
+island from deepest infamy to one of sacred interest and holy
+recollections. The death of Domitian occurred in A.D. 96, and his
+successor, the humane Nerva, recalled those who had been exiled because
+of their faithfulness to Christianity; and John returned to Ephesus,
+where he spent the remainder of his days, dying a natural death at the
+advanced age of about one hundred years.
+
+[Footnote 2: John Bunyan (1628-1688) was a Puritan. After the
+restoration of the Stuarts to the throne, at the close of the English
+Revolution and the failure of the Commonwealth, he was imprisoned for
+twelve years "on account of non-conformity to the established worship."
+It was during this dreary confinement that he wrote his "Pilgrim's
+Progress," the most admirable allegory in English literature.]
+
+The humble manner in which John speaks of himself is affectionate. He
+does not represent himself to the churches as some great apostle or
+prophet, but as "your brother and companion in tribulation," a sharer
+with them in the trials and the persecutions that they were all called
+upon to endure. He also testified that he was "in the kingdom and
+patience of Christ," of which we will speak more hereafter.
+
+It was on the first day of the week, or the Lord's day, that the vision
+recorded in this chapter was given John, while he was "in the Spirit,"
+or under the influence of the spirit of prophecy. He was commanded to
+write in a book the things that he saw and to send it unto the seven
+churches of Asia. It is important to bear in mind the fact that these
+visions are things that John _saw_, all the actors and events passing
+before him as a moving panorama--the most stupendous scene that human
+eyes have ever beheld, containing the future political history of
+various nations and kingdoms and also the history of the church in her
+different phases from the beginning until the final consummation. Of the
+seven churches we will speak more particularly hereafter.
+
+ 12. And I turned to see the voice that spake with me. And being
+ turned, I saw seven golden candlesticks;
+
+ 13. And in the midst of the seven candlesticks one like unto the
+ Son of man, clothed with a garment down to the foot, and girt
+ about the paps with a golden girdle.
+
+ 14. His head and his hairs were white like wool, as white as
+ snow; and his eyes were as a flame of fire;
+
+ 15. And his feet like unto fine brass, as if they burned in a
+ furnace; and his voice as the sound of many waters.
+
+ 16. And he had in his right hand seven stars: and out of his
+ mouth went a sharp two-edged sword: and his countenance was as
+ the sun shineth in his strength.
+
+ 17. And when I saw him, I fell at his feet as dead. And he laid
+ his right hand upon me, saying unto me, Fear not; I am the first
+ and the last:
+
+ 18. I am he that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am alive
+ for evermore, Amen; and have the keys of hell and of death.
+
+The hieroglyphic, or symbolic, characters now begin. Turning in the
+direction from which the voice came, John saw seven beautiful
+candle-sticks and standing in their midst, a personage whose appearance
+was inexpressibly glorious. John had recognized the voice of Christ
+announcing "I am the first and the last," but he was not prepared for
+the sight that met his gaze when he turned and found himself in the
+immediate presence of his August Majesty, the Son of God. A human form
+was there, but clothed in such vestments as proclaimed God; and no
+wonder mortality was overwhelmed when ushered into the presence of the
+uncreated Deity--he whose feet glowed as brass in a furnace, whose eyes
+were as a flame of fire, and whose voice was as the sound of many
+waters. Any man would have fallen as dead before such a personage as is
+here described. Men may talk atheism, but it is the atheism of the lips
+and of a coward heart, an atheism that would flee appalled before the
+burning footsteps of the Deity, and the irresistible conclusion would
+be, "It is God himself."
+
+John was not left in doubt regarding the identity of this personage;
+for, laying his hand upon the prostrate form of the apostle, he said,
+"Fear not; I am the first and the last: I am he that liveth, and was
+dead; and, behold, I am alive forevermore, Amen; and have the keys of
+hell and of death." The ever-living One entered death's domains and
+permitted himself to be bound with chains; but at his pleasure he broke
+them asunder, conquered death, and rose triumphant, carrying with him
+the keys of hell and of death; and he has ascended on high, alive
+forevermore; and at his voice all the dead will arise at his appearing,
+for the grave can no longer hold its victims.
+
+This vision settles an important fact--that when Christ appears upon the
+panoramic scene, he comes in his own person, and not in the character of
+a created substitute. There may be symbols connected with his
+person--the sword of his mouth may signify vengeance upon his enemies;
+his eyes as a flame of fire, superior intelligence and penetrating
+vision, etc.--but he distinctly announces himself to be the Christ of
+God. There is no creature in the universe that could personate "him that
+liveth, and was dead, but is alive forevermore."
+
+ 19. Write the things which thou hast seen, and the things which
+ are, and the things which shall be hereafter;
+
+ 20. The mystery of the seven stars which thou sawest in my right
+ hand, and the seven golden candlesticks. The seven stars are the
+ angels of the seven churches: and the seven candlesticks which
+ thou sawest are the seven churches.
+
+Here John received a special commission to write the things of the
+future that were to be given, the things that were then taking place,
+and also certain events which had come under his personal observation
+during his life-time, and which were also included in the symbolic
+visions, thus covering the entire gospel dispensation.
+
+The special symbols employed in this introductory vision are here
+explained by Christ himself, thus leaving us in no doubt whatever. A
+star is a fit symbol of the position of a Christian minister--set in the
+church to give the light of the gospel of Jesus Christ to the world;
+while a candle-stick fitly represents the congregation working with him
+and sustaining him in his position. The special power of
+Christ--symbolized by his right hand--is manifested in upholding his
+ministers, while he walks in the midst of his churches, ready with the
+sword of his mouth to defend them from the attacks of their adversaries
+and to prove their constant Guardian and Protector.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+ Unto the angel of the church of Ephesus write; These things
+ saith he that holdeth the seven stars in his right hand, who
+ walketh in the midst of the seven golden candlesticks;
+
+ 2. I know thy works, and thy labor, and thy patience, and how
+ thou canst not bear them which are evil: and thou hast tried
+ them which say they are apostles, and are not, and hast found
+ them liars:
+
+ 3. And hast borne, and hast patience, and for my name's sake
+ hast labored, and hast not fainted.
+
+ 4. Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee, because thou hast
+ left thy first love.
+
+ 5. Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent,
+ and do the first works; or else I will come unto thee quickly,
+ and will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except thou
+ repent.
+
+ 6. But this thou hast, that thou hatest the deeds of the
+ Nicolaitanes, which I also hate.
+
+ 7. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+ the churches; To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the
+ tree of life, which is in the midst of the paradise of God.
+
+The special messages to the seven churches of Asia Minor are not of such
+thrilling interest as are the symbolic visions of the remainder of the
+book, yet we can learn many beneficial lessons from the various
+experiences of these congregations.
+
+At the time the Revelation was given, Ephesus was the chief capital of
+Proconsular Asia and its pride and glory. It was also that country's
+chief mart of idolatry, containing, as it did, the magnificent temple of
+Diana, which is reckoned as one of the seven wonders of the world. This
+temple, according to the disclosures of modern excavations, was four
+hundred and eighteen feet in length, and two hundred and thirty-nine in
+width, with one hundred beautiful external pillars of Parian marble,
+each a single shaft about fifty-six feet high. The city was proud of the
+title it had received, "Servant of the Goddess," and even the Roman
+emperors vied with wealthy natives in lavishing gifts to her. One of the
+latter, named Vibius Salutaris, presented a large quantity of gold and
+silver images to be carried annually in procession.
+
+In this proud, wealthy, idolatrous city the apostle Paul planted a
+Christian church, and the great inroads the gospel made into the
+prevalent system of idolatry is shown by one circumstance mentioned in
+the Book of Acts. "And many that believed came, and confessed, and
+showed their deeds. Many of them also which used curious arts brought
+their books together, and burned them before all men: and they counted
+the price of them, and found it fifty thousand pieces of silver. So
+mightily grew the word of God and prevailed." Acts 19:18-20. Fifty
+thousand pieces of silver would be equal to ten thousand dollars' worth,
+or, according to some estimates, six times that amount. But ten thousand
+dollars' worth of books on incantation and magic alone destroyed,
+considering the scarcity of books in that day, shows the wondrous extent
+to which the gospel had been accepted. This was made the occasion of a
+great tumult in the city, when one, Demetrius, seeing that the prestige
+of Diana was diminishing, stirred up the people of the city against Paul
+and his companions, and cried vehemently, "Great is Diana of the
+Ephesians!" The souvenir silver shrines and images of this goddess,
+which had been in such demand by the multitudes of people constantly
+visiting the city, were no longer sought for when the knowledge of the
+one true God was made known; and well might Demetrius and his
+fellow-craftsmen be alarmed as their means of wealth disappeared.
+
+The spiritual condition of this church in Paul's time is worthy of
+notice; for it presents a striking contrast with its condition at the
+time when the special message of the Revelation was addressed to it.
+Paul in his epistle to the Ephesians taught them the glorious doctrine
+of entire sanctification (chap. 5:25-27), and they had received the
+experience; for he gives them the express command, "Grieve not the holy
+Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption." Chap.
+4:30. And again, "After that ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy
+Spirit of promise." Chap. 1:13. Their ministers, also, had been placed
+in their position by authority of the Holy Ghost, and were commanded to
+feed the flock. See Acts 20:28. When this was their heavenly experience,
+their "first works" of patience, love, and perseverance, were acceptable
+unto Christ; but it was not their present condition. A sad declension
+had taken place; therefore the declaration, "I have somewhat against
+thee, because thou hast left thy first love." This was no mere human
+estimate placed upon their piety, but it was their condition as Christ
+himself knew it to be. He "who walketh in the midst of the seven golden
+candlesticks," and knoweth the hearts of all men, declared they had
+fallen, and commanded them to repent and to do the first works. How sad
+that a congregation which had one time enjoyed the fulness of God's
+favor should fall from grace and be threatened with destruction by the
+Lord himself! But there is one consolation to be obtained from the
+experience of this church, and that is, that even if persons have
+enjoyed an experience of pardon and of sanctification and have lost it,
+there is a possibility of their recovering the favor of God, provided
+they "repent, and do the first works."
+
+But Christ, who in chapter 1:5 is said to be "the faithful witness,"
+will not overlook anything that is good, nor censure a congregation
+unjustly. He finds in this church one fact worthy of commendation--their
+abhorrence of the deeds of the Nicolaitans. The infamous practises
+attributed to this party are promiscuous sexual intercourse and the
+eating of things sacrificed to idols. It is said to have derived its
+name from Nicolas, a proselyte of Antioch, who was one of the seven
+deacons appointed by the church at Jerusalem, Acts 6:5. But there is no
+satisfactory evidence that Nicolas was its founder; and it is the belief
+of many, that the sect attributed their origin to him simply to gain the
+prestige of his name. However, its mention in this connection is
+sufficient proof that at this time those corrupt principles had been
+widely promulgated.
+
+The letter closes with an admonition and a promise--an admonition to
+give heed to the things uttered by the Spirit, and a promise of
+everlasting life to the overcomer. This shows that Christ does not
+approve or condemn indiscriminately. If the great mass of professors
+continue in their backslidden condition, the individual that gives heed
+to God's Word and is made an overcomer will have a right to "the tree of
+life, which is in the midst of the paradise of God."
+
+What, may we ask, has been the fate of this church against which Christ
+uttered the threat of removal? There is no proof that they gave heed to
+the exhortation to repent, and the candle-stick has long since been
+taken away. Not a vestige of a church remains to mark the site of this
+once important congregation; nay, the city itself is no more, the stork,
+the jackal, and a few miserable Turkish huts alone remaining on the site
+of this once proud metropolis where thousands congregated and cried,
+"Great is Diana of the Ephesians!"
+
+ 8. And unto the angel of the church in Smyrna write; These
+ things saith the first and the last which was dead, and is
+ alive;
+
+ 9. I know thy works, and tribulation, and poverty, (but thou art
+ rich) and I know the blasphemy of them which say they are Jews,
+ and are not, but are the synagogue of Satan.
+
+ 10. Fear none of those things which thou shalt suffer: behold,
+ the devil shall cast some of you into prison, that ye may be
+ tried; and ye shall have tribulation ten days: be thou faithful
+ unto death, and I will give thee a crown of life.
+
+ 11. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+ the churches; He that overcometh shall not be hurt of the second
+ death.
+
+Smyrna was situated on a bay of the Aegean Sea, its beautiful harbor
+rendering it from time immemorial one of the most important commercial
+cities of Asia Minor. History does not inform us when the gospel was
+first introduced in this city; but at a very early date a large
+congregation existed there, with the venerable Polycarp as its pastor.
+He suffered death by martyrdom under the reign of Marcus Aurelius about
+A.D. 167.
+
+In each of the seven letters to the churches Christ introduces himself
+by some appellation significant of the character he assumes toward them.
+In this he styles himself "the first and the last, which was dead, and
+is alive," a fact very important for that congregation to remember
+during the great seasons of persecution and oppression through which
+they were to be called to pass.
+
+Against this church Christ has no words of condemnation to utter; all is
+encouragement and promise. Their condition of poverty is mentioned. It
+is probable that this very poverty arose because of their accepting
+Christianity and taking joyfully the spoiling of their goods; for it is
+a well-known fact that, when individuals embrace Christianity in an
+idolatrous land, they are disinherited by parents, cast out by
+relatives, and denied public employment. Even the community refuses to
+associate with them or to render them assistance in any form. Their
+means of subsistence is thus cut off, and they are harassed in every
+possible manner. Perhaps this is the very trial of poverty the church of
+Smyrna passed through; but Christ declares that they are rich: yea, God
+hath "chosen the poor of this world rich in faith, and heirs of the
+kingdom which he hath promised to them that love him." Jas. 2:5. Their
+enemies may think that they have reduced them to a condition of
+wretchedness, but in this the persecutors are mistaken. God says the
+righteous are rich. A certain writer has remarked, "There is many a rich
+poor man, and many a poor rich man."
+
+The blasphemy of opposing, self-styled Jews is next mentioned. In all
+probability the term _Jew_ is applied in its spiritual sense. Paul
+declares that "he is not a Jew which is one outwardly ... but he is a
+Jew which is one inwardly" (Rom. 2:28, 29), and that "if ye be Christ's,
+then are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise." Gal.
+3:29. These persons professed to belong to the true "Israel of God"
+(Gal. 6:16), but they were without salvation; and the Smyrnaen church
+would not recognize them as belonging to the congregation, and therefore
+the only name that could be applied to them was "the synagogue of
+Satan." Had they been tolerated in the assembly of the righteous, Christ
+would have condemned or rebuked the church for not performing their
+duty, the same as he did the churches of Pergamos and Thyatira.
+
+Great persecutions for the church of Smyrna are predicted; but he "which
+was dead, and is alive forevermore," having passed through the ordeal of
+suffering and death himself, stands in a position to speak words of
+comfort and consolation, assuring them in the strongest terms that,
+although wicked men and the devil may cast them into prison and
+persecute them unto the death, yet "he that overcometh shall not be hurt
+of the second death." The overcomers are of the number of those who,
+having had "part in the first resurrection, on such the second death
+hath no power." Chap. 20:6. The ten days doubtless are prophetic time
+(which will be explained later) and signify ten years, which was
+probably fulfilled in the terrible persecution that began under the
+reign of Diocletian, and continued ten years, or from A.D. 302 to 312.
+
+The subsequent history of Smyrna has been different from that of
+Ephesus, in that it has retained its name and importance until the
+present day, being the greatest commercial city in the Levant. It has a
+population of more than two hundred thousand, several thousand of whom
+belong to the Greek and Armenian churches. The light there has become
+dimmed, but let us pray that God will soon remember the faith and
+perseverance of his ancient servants and again trim the lamps that once
+shone so brightly.
+
+ 12. And to the angel of the church in Pergamos write; These
+ things saith he which hath the sharp sword with two edges;
+
+ 13. I know thy works, and where thou dwellest, even where
+ Satan's seat is: and thou holdest fast my name, and hast not
+ denied my faith, even in those days wherein Antipas was my
+ faithful martyr, who was slain among you, where Satan dwelleth.
+
+ 14. But I have a few things against thee, because thou hast
+ there them that hold the doctrine of Balaam, who taught Balac to
+ cast a stumbling-block before the children of Israel, to eat
+ things sacrificed unto idols, and to commit fornication.
+
+ 15. So hast thou also them that hold the doctrine of the
+ Nicolaitanes, which thing I hate.
+
+ 16. Repent; or else I will come unto thee quickly, and will
+ fight against them with the sword of my mouth.
+
+ 17. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+ the churches; To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the
+ hidden manna, and will give him a white stone, and in the stone
+ a new name written, which no man knoweth saving he that
+ receiveth it.
+
+Pergamos was a city of considerable importance, the ancient metropolis
+of the province of Mysia and the residence of the Attalian kings.
+
+The description here given of Christ is in accordance with the character
+of the church addressed and the work he found necessary to perform in
+it. They are said to be located "where Satan's seat is." Pergamos was a
+city reputed to be "sacred to the gods" and was one of the headquarters
+of idolatry. There are numerous such cities now among the Hindoos and
+other idolatrous nations. These cities are regarded with peculiar
+veneration and sanctity, and they contain the most honored temples. In
+the midst of such surroundings the influences against Christianity would
+be very great.
+
+The congregation is commended because of its loyalty and steadfastness
+during a period of persecution in which Antipas was slain. When this
+persecution occurred, we are not informed; and as to the identity of
+Antipas, we are also left in uncertainty. Some suppose him to have been
+the elder of the church.
+
+Christ censures them severely, however, for tolerating persons in their
+midst who held the doctrine of Balaam and the pernicious sentiments of
+the Nicolaitans, and he threatens to fight against them with the sword
+of his mouth unless they repent. The doctrine of Balaam is partly
+explained--he "taught Balak to cast a stumbling-block before the
+children of Israel, to eat things sacrificed unto idols, and to commit
+fornication." When Balak desired Balaam to pronounce a curse against
+Israel, God by various means miraculously prevented Balaam's doing so;
+but Balaam craftily instructed Balak to make use of the women of Moab to
+seduce the men of Israel to sacrifice to their idols and to indulge in
+the licentious accompaniments to such idolatry. In many places in
+heathen countries to-day vile women are attached to the temples of the
+gods, and at certain stated feasts licentiousness becomes a sanctioned
+part of the religious celebration. Balaam's plan was successful. God was
+displeased with Israel, and because of this fornication there fell in
+one day twenty-four thousand. For a full account see Num. 22-25;
+31:13-17.
+
+It would appear that the doctrine of Balaam and the doctrine of the
+Nicolaitans were classed as two different heresies; but the corrupt
+tenets of the latter were identical with those of the former, and the
+probable meaning is, "As the Hebrews had Balaamites among them; so,
+likewise, you have among you the Nicolaitans teaching the same
+pernicious doctrines." It is also a singular fact that the Hebrew
+signification of Balaam and the Greek of Nicolas is the same--"subduer
+of the people." Thus the doctrine of Balaam would stand as a
+representation of the principles taught by the Nicolaitans.
+
+The letter to this church also closes with an exhortation and a promise.
+Hidden manna and a white stone in which is inscribed a new name are
+rewarded the overcomer. The interpretations of this white stone have
+been various, but the difficulty seems to lie in determining which
+ancient custom is meant. The most satisfactory to my mind is that
+contained in the following account by Mr. Blunt:
+
+"In primitive times, when traveling was rendered difficult from want of
+places of public entertainment, hospitality was exercised by private
+individuals to a very great extent, of which, indeed, we find frequent
+traces in all history, and in none more than in the Old Testament.
+Persons who partook of this hospitality, and those who practised it,
+frequently contracted habits of friendship and regard for each other,
+and it became a well-established custom among the Greeks and Romans to
+provide their guests with some particular mark, which was handed down
+from father to son, and insured hospitality and kind treatment whenever
+it was presented. This mark was usually a small stone or pebble, cut in
+halves, upon each of which the host and the guest mutually inscribed
+their names, and then interchanged with each other. The production of
+these stones was quite sufficient to insure friendship for themselves or
+descendants whenever they traveled again in the same direction; while it
+is evident that these stones required to be privately kept, and the
+names written upon them carefully concealed, lest others should obtain
+the privileges instead of the persons for whom they were intended." So
+those who have obtained salvation and are overcomers through the blood
+have received the sure pledge of Christ's eternal friendship (which
+those who know not God can not receive) and are invited to partake of
+all of his hospitalities, even to "eat of the hidden manna," which is
+experienced by the truly sanctified.
+
+ 18. And unto the angel of the church in Thyatira write; These
+ things saith the Son of God, who hath his eyes like unto a flame
+ of fire, and his feet are like fine brass;
+
+ 19. I know thy works, and charity, and service, and faith, and
+ thy patience, and thy works; and the last to be more than the
+ first.
+
+ 20. Notwithstanding I have a few things against thee, because
+ thou sufferest that woman Jezebel, which calleth herself a
+ prophetess, to teach and to seduce my servants to commit
+ fornication, and to eat things sacrificed unto idols.
+
+ 21. And I gave her space to repent of her fornication; and she
+ repented not.
+
+ 22. Behold, I will cast her into a bed, and them that commit
+ adultery with her into great tribulation, except they repent of
+ their deeds.
+
+ 23. And I will kill her children with death; and all the
+ churches shall know that I am he which searcheth the reins and
+ hearts: and I will give unto every one of you according to your
+ works.
+
+ 24. But unto you I say, and unto the rest in Thyatira, as many
+ as have not this doctrine, and which have not known the depths
+ of Satan, as they speak; I will put upon you none other burden.
+
+ 25. But that which ye have already hold fast till I come.
+
+ 26. And he that overcometh, and keepeth my works unto the end,
+ to him will I give power over the nations:
+
+ 27. And he shall rule them with a rod of iron; as the vessels of
+ a potter shall they be broken to shivers: even as I received of
+ my Father.
+
+ 28. And I will give him the morning star.
+
+ 29. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+ the churches.
+
+To this congregation Christ manifests himself in the character of him
+"who hath his eyes like unto a flame of fire, and his feet like fine
+brass," denoting the fact that he is the great discerner of all hearts
+and that he is able to render unto every man according to his deeds.
+Whether the expression, "his feet like fine brass," has any particular
+signification, I am unable to say.
+
+This letter opens with a commendation of the works, the charity, the
+service, and the faith of this church. In these things they had made
+considerable advancement. Nevertheless, Christ had something against
+them, because they had suffered "that woman Jezebel" to teach false
+doctrines and to seduce the servants of Christ to compromise with
+idolatry and to commit fornication. It is improbable that Jezebel was
+her real name; but she was a Jezebel in character, named in this letter
+after King Ahab's wicked wife, who killed the Lord's prophets, seduced
+her husband into idolatry, and fed the priests of Baal at her own table.
+Some have supposed that this appellation designated a number or class of
+people teaching these doctrines; but the manner in which "her children,"
+or disciples, are spoken of would seem rather to point out a particular
+woman--one who was a leader and the chief instrument of mischief.
+
+The long-suffering of Christ had been manifested in this case. He had
+given her an opportunity to repent of her evil deeds, but she would not.
+Now he declares that he will cause his judgments to descend upon her and
+her followers. By casting her into a bed is doubtless meant that he
+would bring her down upon a bed of sickness and pain and thus make her a
+most distressing object. Her partners in sin were to suffer "great
+tribulation," and "her children," or disciples, he would kill with
+death, or deadly pestilence. Thus would this whole corrupt party be
+visited with divine judgments according to their works; while their
+great pretensions to wisdom and discernment, "as they speak," or as they
+term it, will be shown to be nothing but the "depths of Satan."
+
+The frequent references to these gross sins in the letters to the
+churches may seem a little strange to us in the altered circumstances of
+society in which we live; but when we consider the tone of public
+sentiment and the prevalence of idolatry at that time, it will be seen
+that the lapse into these sins was very easy. Some compromised with the
+heathen by joining in their idolatrous feasts, maintaining that the meat
+was not affected one way or the other, and this proved but a
+stepping-stone to the licentious principles and the corrupt practises of
+those with whom they thus associated.
+
+The remainder of this letter is full of encouragement to the faithful.
+The only burden Christ placed upon them was a severe censure because
+they tolerated that abominable party in their midst. They were exhorted
+to continue faithful and were promised power over the nations. These
+they should rule with a rod of iron, the same as Christ, who received
+this power from his Father. The law, or rod, with which Christ, and his
+people with him, as _kings_ and priests, rule the nations is the word of
+God, the most unyielding law, based upon the greatest authority, ever
+written. "Let the saints be joyful in glory ... let the high praises of
+God be in their mouth, and a two-edged sword in their hand; to execute
+vengeance upon the heathen, and punishments upon the people; to bind
+their kings with chains, and their nobles with fetters of iron; to
+execute upon them the _judgments written_: this honor have _all his
+saints_." Psa. 149:5-9.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+
+ And unto the angel of the church in Sardis write; These things
+ saith he that hath the seven Spirits of God, and the seven
+ stars; I know thy works, that thou hast a name that thou livest,
+ and art dead.
+
+ 2. Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain, that are
+ ready to die: for I have not found thy works perfect before God.
+
+ 3. Remember therefore how thou hast received and heard, and hold
+ fast, and repent. If therefore thou shalt not watch, I will come
+ on thee as a thief, and thou shalt not know what hour I will
+ come upon thee.
+
+ 4. Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled
+ their garments; and they shall walk with me in white: for they
+ are worthy.
+
+ 5. He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white
+ raiment; and I will not blot out his name out of the book of
+ life, but I will confess his name before my Father, and before
+ his angels.
+
+ 6. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+ the churches.
+
+Sardis was one of the chief cities of western Asia Minor. It was
+beautifully situated on the river Pactolus, in the middle Hermus valley,
+at the foot of Mount Tmolus, and was once the capital of the kingdom of
+Lydia, the place of residence of Croesus and other Lydian kings. It was
+a city of great opulence and splendor, and "distinguished for the
+voluptuous and debauched manners of its inhabitants."
+
+To this church Christ introduces himself as "he that hath the seven
+Spirits of God, and the seven stars"--that is, he has control of the
+Holy Spirit's agency and of his ministers. Thus, the great spiritual
+agencies of the church are in his keeping to bestow or to take away as
+he pleases. Considering the dead condition of this church of Sardis, it
+was very appropriate for Christ thus to address himself to them. He has
+no words of commendation to offer, no works of charity, service, faith,
+and patience of which to approve. They had works, but these were not
+"perfect before God." They were threatened with sudden visitation, as
+unexpected as a thief breaking in unawares upon the slumbering inmates
+of a dwelling in the still hours of night. Their condition was different
+from that of any of the churches before mentioned. They are not charged
+with such vile practises as prevailed at Pergamus and Thyatira, the
+doctrine of the Nicolaitans had gained no foothold among them, yet their
+works were not perfect. "Thou hast a name that thou livest, and are
+_dead_." They had maintained the external form of religion, but the
+vital power of godliness was lacking.
+
+Although Christ could not commend this church as a body, on account of
+their lack of spirituality, yet he testified, "Thou hast a few names
+even in Sardis which have not defiled their garments." In the midst of
+all the cold formalism of professors and surrounded by worldliness and
+iniquity, a few preserved their Christian integrity and were approved by
+the Lord. "Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this
+... to keep himself unspotted from the world." Jas. 1:27. All such
+overcomers have the promise of being clothed in white raiment ("the
+righteousness of saints "--chap. 19:8) and of having their names
+preserved in the "book of life" in heaven and confessed before the
+Father and the holy angels. Wondrous admission into the heavenly realm!
+Presented to the Father and the innumerable hosts of heaven _by the
+Lord, himself_, there, amid sacred environments, to enjoy the
+transcendent felicity of eternal blessedness! "They are worthy," saith
+Christ.
+
+Although this church was threatened with sudden visitation, there is no
+hint given of the manner in which this should be fulfilled, for the
+reason, perhaps, that it might be all the more unexpected. The church
+has long since passed out of existence. The city itself has lain in
+ruins for centuries, the modern village of Sart composed of a few huts
+inhabited by semi-nomadic Yuruks alone remaining near the ancient site.
+Cattle now graze on grassy plains once traversed by streets and thronged
+with the inhabitants of this superb metropolis.
+
+ 7. And to the angel of the church in Philadelphia write; These
+ things saith he that is holy, he that is true, he that hath the
+ key of David, he that openeth, and no man shutteth; and
+ shutteth, and no man openeth;
+
+ 8. I know thy works: behold, I have set before thee an open
+ door, and no man can shut it: for thou hast a little strength,
+ and hast kept my word, and hast not denied my name.
+
+ 9. Behold, I will make them of the synagogue of Satan, which say
+ they are Jews, and are not, but do lie; behold, I will make them
+ to come and worship before thy feet, and to know that I have
+ loved thee.
+
+ 10. Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I also will
+ keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all
+ the world, to try them that dwell upon the earth.
+
+ 11. Behold, I come quickly: hold that fast which thou hast, that
+ no man take thy crown.
+
+ 12. Him that overcometh will I make a pillar in the temple of my
+ God, and he shall go no more out: and I will write upon him the
+ name of my God, and the name of the city of my God, which is new
+ Jerusalem, which cometh down out of heaven from my God, and I
+ will write upon him my new name.
+
+ 13. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+ the churches.
+
+Philadelphia was once a large and powerful city, and it continued thus
+until later times. Prior to the time the Revelation was written, it had
+suffered severely from repeated earthquakes, which caused it to be
+almost deserted by its inhabitants. Subsequently, however, it recovered
+and became a prosperous, influential city.
+
+The character Christ assumes toward this church is that of the Holy and
+True--one who will justly reward them for their patience and
+perseverance--and by virtue of his possessing the key of David (a symbol
+of power and authority), he is able to place before them an open door
+which no man can shut.
+
+The character of this church is wholly unlike that of the preceding. In
+that, there was nothing to commend, but much to condemn; whereas to
+this, all is admonition, encouragement, and promise, because they had
+"kept the word of his patience" and had not denied his name. Christ knew
+their works and that they were worthy of approval. They still possessed
+"a little strength" and had not denied his name.
+
+Christ, who always upholds and rewards his faithful followers, although
+they be few in number and constitute the despised of earth, was not
+unrighteous that he should overlook this humble congregation of devoted
+disciples that had kept his word, but he made them a number of special
+promises _because_ of their faith and perseverance. The first was the
+assurance that he had set before them an open door which no man could
+shut. A door is a means either of entrance or of escape, and signifies
+that God was going to open before them a greater field of enlargement
+and success, or else would furnish them a sure means of escape and
+protection from their cruel and relentless persecutors. It will be
+remembered that the church of Smyrna also received nothing but
+commendation and encouragement; but there was no promise of an open door
+to them. On the contrary, they were told that they should be tried, cast
+into prison, and suffer tribulation ten days. They were comforted,
+however, with a certain assurance of future reward and a crown of
+everlasting life. But before the church of Philadelphia there was opened
+a scene of greater prosperity, deliverance from enemies, greater
+enlargement, and the glorious prospect of seeing multitudes of souls
+brought under the influence of the saving gospel of Christ.
+
+The next promise was that of deliverance from opposing Jews, who were to
+be humbled before them. This refers, doubtless, to persons who had a
+mere profession of Christianity and who were not recognized by the
+congregation--the same as the blaspheming Jews of Smyrna. The
+faithfulness of God's elect would eventually be the means of bringing
+them back to an experience of salvation, so that they would worship in
+the midst of the church again.
+
+Another promise to this congregation was, "I also will keep thee from
+the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world." Some
+dreadful calamity is here predicted, during which the power of God would
+be mercifully manifested in granting this church a special preservation.
+Some suppose it to have reference to a great general persecution
+throughout the Roman empire, during which the Christians of Philadelphia
+would be spared. This may have been the fact; but whether it was or not,
+we have no means of information. When we come to consider the symbols of
+chapter 9, in which the delusive error of Mohammedanism is set forth, we
+will see what a period of sore trial this delusion was to the Eastern
+churches. It is also a fact that, in the midst of this abounding heresy,
+the church of Philadelphia was preserved as was no other church of Asia.
+When the followers of Mohammed were sweeping like a whirlwind over the
+Eastern empire, ravaging everything before them, Philadelphia remained
+an independent Christian city, when _all the other_ cities of Asia Minor
+were under the power of the Saracen sword. It held out against the
+Ottoman power until the year 1390 A.D., when it surrendered to Sultan
+Bayazid's mixed army of Ottoman Turks and Byzantine Christians (?). This
+was six years after the death of Wickliffe, "the morning star of the
+reformation," who opposed the corruptions of the Papacy, gave the world
+the first English translation of the Bible, and sowed the seeds that
+soon grew and produced a Huss, a Jerome, and a Luther. So God preserved
+the Christians of Philadelphia in the East until he began raising up
+others to herald his truth in the West, whose labors soon ripened into
+the glorious Reformation of the Sixteenth Century.
+
+His final promise to the overcomer is that he shall be made a pillar in
+the temple of God, and receive the name of God, of Christ, and of the
+New Jerusalem, or city of God. In some manner the Christian is labelled
+with the name of God, whose property he is; with the name of Christ, by
+whom he was purchased; and with the name of the New Jerusalem, or city
+of God, his inheritance and eternal abiding-place; and he is made a
+pillar in the temple of God. By turning to Heb. 12:22, 23, we find that
+the general assembly and church of God in this dispensation constitutes,
+in one important sense, the New Jerusalem, or city of God, in which the
+overcomers abide. "But ye _are come_ unto Mount Sion, and unto the city
+of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem ... to the general assembly
+and church of the first-born, which are written in heaven." The church
+is also styled the house or temple of God, composed of people out of all
+nations who "are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets,
+Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner-stone; in whom all the
+building fitly framed together groweth unto _an holy temple_ in the Lord
+... for an habitation of God through the Spirit." Eph. 2:20-22. See also
+1 Cor. 3:17; 1 Pet. 2:5; 1 Tim. 3:15.
+
+To be a pillar in this temple of God means to occupy a conspicuous or
+useful position in supporting the truth, examples of which are to be
+found in such characters as "James, Cephas, and John, who seemed to be
+pillars" in the church in apostolic times. Gal. 2:9. In the last prayer
+of Christ to the Father, he says concerning his disciples, "While I was
+with them in the world, I kept them in thy name" (John 17:12); and since
+the church promised by Christ (Mat. 16:18) has been established, we
+continually bear the name of the Father, its title being the church or
+city of God. We also bear the new name of Christ, as explained in
+chapter 2:17, and we meet together and worship in that name (Mat.
+18:20), obeying the exhortation of the apostle Paul--"Whatsoever ye do
+in word or deed, do all _in the name of the Lord Jesus_, giving thanks
+to God and the Father by him." Col. 3:17. A better understanding of the
+manner in which we receive the name of God and of his city will be
+obtained when we come to the consideration of the followers of a false,
+degenerate church represented as receiving the "mark of the beast," by
+which they are designated.
+
+To inquire further into the history of this church, Philadelphia still
+remains with a population of about fifteen thousand. It contains a
+number of places of public worship, a resident (Greek) archbishop, and
+several inferior clergy. Mr. Keith, in his "Evidence of Prophecy,"
+speaks of the then presiding bishop, and says that he acknowledges "the
+Bible as the only foundation of all religious belief" and admits that
+"abuses have entered into the church, which former ages might endure,
+but the present must put down." It is also a singular coincidence that
+the modern Turkish name of the city, Ala-Shehr, signifies "city of God."
+
+This description of the church of Philadelphia I will bring to a close
+by adding the following extract from Gibbon, recorded in his noted
+history entitled "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire." It is of
+especial value since the writer, being an avowed infidel, can not be
+convicted of misconstruing historical facts in order to favor
+Christianity.
+
+"The captivity or ruin of the seven churches of Asia was consummated [by
+the Ottomans] A.D. 1312, and the barbarous lords of Ionia and Lydia
+still trample on the monuments of classic and Christian antiquity. In
+the loss of Ephesus the Christians deplore the fall of the first
+candle-stick of the Revelation. The desolation is complete; and the
+temple of Diana and the church of Mary will equally elude the search of
+the curious traveler. The circus and three stately theatres of Laodicea
+are now peopled with wolves and foxes. Sardis is reduced to a miserable
+village. The God of Mohammed without a rival is invoked in the mosques
+of Thyatira and Pergamus; and the populousness of Smyrna is supported by
+the foreign trade of the Franks and Armenians. _Philadelphia alone_ has
+been saved by prophecy or courage. At a distance from the sea, forgotten
+by the emperors, encompassed on all sides by the Turks, her valiant sons
+defended their religion and freedom above fourscore years, and at length
+capitulated with the proudest of the Ottomans. Among the Greek colonies
+of Asia, Philadelphia is still erect--a column in a scene of ruins--a
+pleasing example that the path of honor and safety may sometimes be the
+same." Vol. VI., p. 229.
+
+ 14. And unto the angel of the church of the Laodiceans write;
+ These things saith the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the
+ beginning of the creation of God;
+
+ 15. I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I
+ would thou wert cold or hot.
+
+ 16. So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot,
+ I will spue thee out of my mouth.
+
+ 17. Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods,
+ and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art
+ wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked:
+
+ 18. I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire, that
+ thou mayest be rich; and white raiment, that thou mayest be
+ clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear; and
+ anoint thine eyes with eye salve, that thou mayest see.
+
+ 19. As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten: be zealous
+ therefore, and repent.
+
+ 20. Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my
+ voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup
+ with him, and he with me.
+
+ 21. To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my
+ throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down with my Father
+ in his throne.
+
+ 22. He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto
+ the churches.
+
+Laodicea was one of the wealthiest cities of Asia Minor. It was built
+upon some low hills, and occupied an important situation in the center
+of a very fertile district. It was famous for its money transactions and
+for the beautiful soft wool grown by the sheep of the country, which
+facts are both alluded to in the message. Verses 17, 18. During the
+reign of Tiberius Caesar it was entirely destroyed by an earthquake, but
+its wealthy inhabitants rebuilt it immediately. A Christian church was
+soon planted there; for Paul makes the request that his epistle to the
+Colossians be read in the church of Laodicea and that his epistle to the
+church of Laodicea (which was not included in the New Testament canon)
+be read unto them. Col. 4:16.
+
+The condition of this church, according to the burden of the message,
+was worse than that of any of the others; for there is not only no
+commendation of former faith and piety, but it is not even said of them,
+as of the church at Sardis, that a few names were left who had not
+defiled their garments. Christ, who here represents himself in the
+character of the "faithful and true Witness," testifies that they are
+"neither cold nor hot." They did not have enough piety nor zeal to cause
+them to do anything for the honor of Christ and his cause, neither were
+they open enemies. They were merely lukewarm, insincere friends, and, as
+such, were in a position to do the greatest harm. A certain writer has
+said, "We always dread a professed but insincere friend; he is the least
+desirable of all relations."
+
+They are further described as being satisfied to remain in their
+lukewarm condition, indulging themselves in the riches and the pleasures
+of this life. Theirs was a rich, prosperous, influential church in their
+estimation, and they were proud of it; but "the faithful and true
+Witness" declares that they were "wretched, and poor, and blind, and
+naked." What a contrast this congregation presents with the churches of
+Smyrna and Philadelphia, whose poverty and "little strength" are
+expressly mentioned, but who were rich in spirituality, and who received
+no reproof, but words of comfort! They of Laodicea possessed no true
+gold from the mine of gospel truth, no white raiment of righteousness to
+hide their spiritual nakedness, no clear vision to enable them to
+discern the things of the Spirit. In fact, they lacked everything
+necessary to constitute a church of which the Lord could approve and
+which would be an honor to his cause. But notwithstanding their sad
+condition, Christ still pleads with them to repent of their doings and
+to allow him to come in and sup with them, promising the overcomer the
+privilege of sharing the throne of his Redeemer.
+
+On account of their lukewarmness a severe threat was uttered--"I will
+spue thee out of my mouth." Allusion is doubtless made to the former
+catastrophe that overthrew the city under Tiberius, thus giving them
+warning of the destruction that might come upon them in the future. The
+result has been in accordance with the prediction. God spued that church
+out of his mouth centuries ago, and nothing remains of that proud,
+wealthy city. Not even a Turk has any fixed residence on the spot. Its
+ruins alone remain in their desolation, "rejected of God, deserted of
+man, its glory a ruin, its name a reproach." The Encyclopaedia Britannica
+says, "Its ruins are of wide extent.... There is no doubt, however, that
+much has been buried beneath the surface by the _frequent earthquakes_
+to which the district is exposed."
+
+The prophecies concerning these individual churches have been fulfilled;
+so that even infidelity itself bears witness to the "strange
+verification of Apocalyptic promise and threatening." Two of the
+churches, Ephesus and Laodicea, where no spiritual souls remained, were
+threatened with utter extinction. They are now in utter ruins--forsaken,
+desolate. Sardis, too, where only a few names were left, is reduced to a
+small Turkish village, without a church or a Christian. Pergamus and
+Thyatira, where much spirituality remained, but where wickedness also
+was tolerated, still survive, though but mere remnants of their former
+greatness. While Smyrna and Philadelphia, where Christ found nothing to
+condemn and to whose churches he uttered only words of comfort and
+promise, remain until the present day and are the brightest spots on the
+whole scene, standing like erect columns in the midst of the surrounding
+ruins.
+
+I do not wish, however, to give too much prominence to the cities
+themselves in the fulfilment of these prophecies. The churches located
+in these seven cities of Asia were doubtless the main thing under
+consideration in the utterance of these promises and threatenings. Yet
+it is a singular fact that the subsequent history of the cities
+themselves has accorded in a remarkable degree with the nature of the
+prophecies uttered. It may be that God has preserved Smyrna and
+Philadelphia because of the piety of their ancient inhabitants.
+
+He who held the seven stars in his right hand and walked in the midst of
+the seven golden candle-sticks, still possesses the control of his
+ministers and is present in the congregations of the righteous; but let
+us all take warning from the example of the churches of Asia, and live
+such a life of devotion, charity, faith, and patience as Christ, the
+"faithful and true Witness," will approve of, that we may "walk with him
+in white" and have right to the "tree of life which is in the midst of
+the paradise of God."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+ After this I looked, and, behold, a door was opened in heaven:
+ and the first voice which I heard was as it were of a trumpet
+ talking with me; which said, Come up hither, and I will show
+ thee things which must be hereafter.
+
+ 2. And immediately I was in the spirit: and, behold, a throne
+ was set in heaven, and one sat on the throne.
+
+ 3. And he that sat was to look upon like a jasper and a sardine
+ stone: and there was a rainbow round about the throne, in sight
+ like unto an emerald.
+
+ 4. And round about the throne were four and twenty seats: and
+ upon the seats I saw four and twenty elders sitting, clothed in
+ white raiment; and they had on their heads crowns of gold.
+
+ 5. And out of the throne proceeded lightnings and thunderings
+ and voices: and there were seven lamps of fire burning before
+ the throne, which are the seven spirits of God.
+
+ 6. And before the throne there was a sea of glass like unto
+ crystal: and in the midst of the throne, and round about the
+ throne, were four beasts full of eyes before and behind.
+
+ 7. And the first beast was like a lion, and the second beast
+ like a calf, and the third beast had a face as a man, and the
+ fourth beast was like a flying eagle.
+
+ 8. And the four beasts had each of them six wings about him; and
+ they were full of eyes within: and they rest not day and night,
+ saying, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is,
+ and is to come.
+
+ 9. And when those beasts give glory and honor and thanks to him
+ that sat on the throne, who liveth for ever and ever,
+
+ 10. The four and twenty elders fall down before him that sat on
+ the throne, and worship him that liveth for ever and ever, and
+ cast their crowns before the throne, saying,
+
+ 11. Thou art worthy, O Lord, to receive glory and honor and
+ power: for thou hast created all things, and for thy pleasure
+ they are and were created.
+
+It is probable that the Apocalypse was communicated to John in parts, or
+consisted of a series of symbolic visions. This is indicated by the
+expression "after this I looked," and is also confirmed by the words
+following, "And immediately I was in the spirit," implying that the
+vision recorded in chapter 1, which was given on the Lord's day, had
+been interrupted and that a new one now began when the angel with
+trumpet voice gave summons for him to ascend to heaven "in the spirit"
+(or under the influence of the spirit of prophecy) to behold the events
+of the future, passing before him as a vast moving picture.
+
+This fact of John's ascension to heaven to behold certain visions of the
+future (which begin properly with chapter 6) will serve to explain many
+allusions to things said to occur in heaven, merely signifying that John
+was in heaven when these things were revealed to him, although their
+fulfilment was intimately connected with the affairs of the church on
+earth, for whose benefit the Revelation was given and unto whom it was
+sent.
+
+When the apostle ascended through the door that had been opened unto
+him, the first object that met his vision and absorbed his soul was a
+throne with the Almighty seated upon it, around whom all the inhabitants
+of heaven were assembled. No symbol of God is given, for the reason that
+there is no analagous object that can be chosen as his representative.
+True, John saw a throne, but that is a symbol, not of God himself, but
+of his supreme power and authority. One was seated upon the throne
+separate from the throne itself. It is not said that a jasper or a
+sardine stone was seated thereon, for that would be to make such an
+object the representative of God; but he that sat on the throne "was to
+look upon" like a jasper or sardine stone. The jasper mentioned was in
+all probability the diamond, and is described in chapter 21:11 as a
+stone most precious, clear as crystal; while the sardine stone was a
+brilliant gem of a red hue. This description naturally suggests the
+vestments of a great monarch in a position of authority upon his throne.
+The main idea, then, as here expressed, is that the appearance of the
+Almighty was so inexpressibly glorious that it could be likened to
+nothing except the beauty of the most resplendent gems. But God himself
+appears in his own person, unrepresented by another, for the reason, as
+above stated, that no inferior intelligence of earth or heaven can
+analagously represent the uncreated Deity.
+
+The throne of the omnipotent One was surrounded by a beautiful rainbow
+of emerald clearness, and was probably a perfect one, or a complete
+circle, such as ours would be could it come wholly into our sight. The
+rainbow on the cloud, to Noah and his descendants, constitutes the sure
+pledge of God's covenant promise not to destroy the earth with another
+deluge; so, also, the bow surrounding the throne is a symbol of God's
+covenant favor with his people eternally.
+
+There were "lightnings and thunderings and voices" proceeding from the
+throne--the same outward manifestations as heralded the Godhead when he
+came down on Sinai to declare his holy law. The "seven lamps of fire
+burning before the throne" are said to signify the seven spirits of God.
+These are not lamp-stands or candle-sticks, such as the ones in the
+midst of which the Son of God walked on earth, but seven lights or
+flames of fire, representing the operation of the Holy Spirit upon the
+hearts of men and women. Surrounding the throne also was "a sea of glass
+like unto crystal." In the Greek it stands in a little different
+form--"And before the throne _as it were_ a sea of glass." Describing
+the same object in chapter 15:2, the Revelator says, "I saw _as it were_
+a sea of glass." It was a broad expanse spread out before the throne
+with a glassy or transparent appearance like crystal. Its signification
+will be made clear hereafter.
+
+In addition to this description of the throne and Deity, our attention
+is directed to certain objects before and surrounding the throne. Four
+beasts and four and twenty elders are brought to view. The word _beasts_
+is a very unfortunate translation, being necessarily associated in our
+minds with the brute creation. It is not the word _therion_, which in
+thirty-five instances in the Apocalypse is translated beast, denoting an
+animal of wild disposition, but the word _zoon_, which signifies "a
+living creature," and is thus rendered by many of the translators of the
+New Testament. Their being full of eyes signifies sleepless vigilance
+and superior intelligence and discernment. The chief description given
+of the first living creature is that it was "like a lion." It is stated,
+not that the creature was a lion, but that it was "like a lion." It
+possessed some peculiar quality characteristic of the lion; namely,
+strength and courage. The second living creature, "like a calf," or,
+more properly, the ox, is symbolic of sacrifice or of patient labor. The
+third, with "a face as a man," denotes reason and intelligence. While
+the fourth, "like a flying eagle," is an emblem of swiftness and
+far-sighted vision.
+
+But the peculiar qualities thus symbolized are possessed by the four
+living creatures themselves, and what do _they_ represent? To whom are
+the four and twenty elders referred? They are particularly distinguished
+from the angelic throng. In the ninth verse of the following chapter the
+elders and the living creatures represent themselves as the host of
+people redeemed by the blood of Christ "out of every kindred, and
+tongue, and people, and nation." The above-mentioned characteristics,
+then, are the peculiar possession of God's people--power and courage to
+attack all enemies and to gain the victory; a spirit of perseverance in
+patiently laboring for Christ, with a willingness to sacrifice their
+lives, if necessary, for the glory of God; ability to receive a
+"knowledge of the truth," that they may understand the will of God in
+Christ Jesus concerning them; and power and willingness to obey
+instantly when able to discern spiritual things, rising above the things
+of earth and the trials and persecutions of life--soaring away to
+loftier heights, there to bask continually in the blessed sunlight of
+God's eternal presence.
+
+Why was it necessary that the redeemed company of God's people should be
+represented by _four_ living creatures? Doubtless because it would
+probably have been very difficult to select any _one_ creature combining
+all the characteristics desired to represent all God's people of all
+ages. It is also a significant fact that all the people of God on earth
+were included in four great dispensations--ante-deluvian, post-deluvian,
+Mosaic, and Christian; although it is not certain that _four_ living
+creatures were selected for the special purpose of showing the number of
+dispensations. However, this division of time is well established in the
+Bible. Peter reckons a new world beginning with Noah (2 Pet. 3:6, 7),
+stating that the old world had been destroyed. 2 Pet. 2:5. God came down
+upon Mount Sinai and delivered the old covenant, thus marking a distinct
+dispensation; while Jesus Christ established the new covenant and
+ushered in the fourth and last dispensation. See Heb. 12:18-24. Under
+the first dispensation, Abel by faith offered unto God an "excellent
+sacrifice"; men "began to call upon the name of the Lord" (Gen. 4:26);
+Enoch "walked with God" and "was translated that he should not see
+death"; while Noah, "a preacher of righteousness," was "perfect in his
+generation" and "condemned the world" by his preaching and obedience.
+The second dispensation was graced with a faithful Abraham, who
+"staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief, but was strong in
+faith," from which circumstance he was called "the friend of God" and
+has justly received the title "father of the faithful." In his footsteps
+followed Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, and Moses. The law age contains the names
+of many illustrious prophets of God, and the New Testament era abounds
+with brilliant examples of faith and devotion.
+
+The ministry of John the Baptist can not be said to form another
+dispensation, because of its short duration (he preceding Christ but six
+months), and being at the time unknown outside of a very limited
+territory. Another dispensation could not be begun and _completed_ while
+the old covenant dispensation was yet in force; for that would make two
+dispensations in full force at the same time--a thing impossible. Also,
+John's work, according to the evangelist, marks the beginning of the
+gospel dispensation (Mark 1:1-4), from which time the kingdom of God was
+preached and men pressed into it. Luke 16:16.
+
+It was by virtue of the future atonement-work of Christ that any were
+enabled to enjoy God's favor in Old Testament times. Even their
+sacrifices, which originated in the family of Adam and which were
+continued from generation to generation, pointed forward to the
+sacrificial offering of the Savior and by this means purchased covenant
+favors with Heaven. So, after all, the atonement was for their benefit
+as well as for ours. Paul expressly informs us that Christ died for the
+"redemption of the transgressions that were _under the first
+testament_." Heb. 9:15. "Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and _all the
+prophets_" are "in the kingdom of God" (Luke 13:28), and constitute a
+part of this great redeemed host set forth under the symbol of the four
+living creatures.
+
+The four and twenty elders, although representing themselves as a part
+of this redeemed company, evidently have some special signification; for
+they are presented to us as separate characters from the four living
+creatures. Who are they? Undoubtedly they represent the ministers of
+God, the number twenty-four also signifying perfection or completeness,
+being drawn from certain facts connected with the two dispensations in
+which God has had a clerical ministry. The natural heads of the tribes
+of Israel were the twelve patriarchs; while the spiritual heads of the
+Christian church are the twelve apostles of the Lamb, they constituting
+a part of the foundation upon which it is built. Eph. 2:20. In a
+subsequent chapter we have an account of the sealing of the twelve
+tribes, by which is meant the sealing, not of the literal Israel, but of
+the spiritual, the twelve tribes being selected from the proper
+department to stand as a symbol of the true Israel in this dispensation,
+which is expressly said to consist of people of all nations. Natural
+Israel and spiritual Israel are frequently used to designate God's
+people; so, also, in the case before us the twelve patriarchs as heads
+of the natural Israel and the twelve disciples as heads (in one
+important sense) of the spiritual Israel are taken to represent the
+entire ministry. In the description of the New Jerusalem we find
+conspicuously inscribed the names of the twelve tribes of the children
+of Israel and of the twelve apostles of the Lamb, thus making the number
+twenty-four. Chap. 21:12, 14.
+
+Although the ministers seem to be a special class among those
+constituting the redeemed multitude, yet their intimate connection with
+the remainder is set forth under another symbol--that of wings _attached
+to_ the four living creatures. Each of the four living ones possessed
+six wings, which, taken numerically, make up twenty-four again. The
+wings of a living creature would signify its means of flight; and it is
+by the action of the ministry, who "go into all the world" as flying
+messengers to preach the everlasting gospel, that the church of God is
+established among all nations. Thus, under the symbol of living
+creatures with wings is set forth the glorious harmony and unity that
+exists in the body of Christ between ministry and laity.
+
+The elders are represented as being clothed in white raiment and as
+possessing golden crowns. "White raiment" is a symbol of righteousness
+(chap. 19:8), while crowns represent special power and authority. God's
+ministers possess both. They are made righteous through the blood of the
+everlasting covenant and are given power over all the power of the enemy
+and authority to heal the sick and to cast out devils.
+
+The entire company are engaged in worshiping God unceasingly, the elders
+casting their crowns before the throne, thus ascribing all praise,
+honor, and glory to Him who has delegated to them the authority they
+possess. And may we, my brethren, never grow weary in well-doing and
+conclude that the worship of God grows monotonous; but let us, with
+heart and soul, join the universal chorus, "Holy, holy, holy, Lord God
+Almighty."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+ And I saw in the right hand of him that sat on the throne a book
+ written within and on the backside, sealed with seven seals.
+
+ 2. And I saw a strong angel proclaiming with a loud voice, Who
+ is worthy to open the book, and to loose the seals thereof?
+
+ 3. And no man in heaven, nor in earth, neither under the earth,
+ was able to open the book, neither to look thereon.
+
+ 4. And I wept much, because no man was found worthy to open and
+ to read the book, neither to look thereon.
+
+ 5. And one of the elders saith unto me, Weep not: behold, the
+ Lion of the tribe of Juda, the Root of David, hath prevailed to
+ open the book, and to loose the seven seals thereof.
+
+ 6. And I beheld, and, lo, in the midst of the throne and of the
+ four beasts, and in the midst of the elders, stood a Lamb as it
+ had been slain, having seven horns and seven eyes, which are the
+ seven spirits of God sent forth into all the earth.
+
+ 7. And he came and took the book out of the right hand of him
+ that sat upon the throne.
+
+ 8. And when he had taken the book, the four beasts and four and
+ twenty elders fell down before the Lamb, having every one of
+ them harps, and golden vials full of odors, which are the
+ prayers of saints.
+
+ 9. And they sung a new song, saying, Thou art worthy to take the
+ book, and to open the seals thereof: for thou wast slain, and
+ hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every kindred, and
+ tongue, and people, and nation;
+
+ 10. And hast made us unto our God kings and priests: and we
+ shall reign on the earth.
+
+ 11. And I beheld, and I heard the voice of many angels round
+ about the throne and the beasts and the elders: and the number
+ of them was ten thousand times ten thousand, and thousands of
+ thousands;
+
+ 12. Saying with a loud voice, Worthy is the Lamb that was slain
+ to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and
+ honor, and glory, and blessing.
+
+ 13. And every creature which is in heaven, and on the earth, and
+ under the earth, and such as are in the sea, and all that are in
+ them, heard it saying, Blessing, and honor, and glory, and
+ power, be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the
+ Lamb for ever and ever.
+
+ 14. And the four beasts said, Amen. And the four and twenty
+ elders fell down and worshipped him that liveth for ever and
+ ever.
+
+The vision of this chapter is but a continuation of the preceding one,
+being a sublime description of the exaltation and office-work of Christ
+in his two-fold character as the Lion of the tribe of Juda and as a
+sacrificial offering for the sins of the world. The Apocalypse opens
+with the words, "The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave unto
+him," and it is fitting that his special prerogatives and
+characteristics, together with the true position he occupies, should
+first be revealed. This was especially necessary in view of the fact to
+be revealed, that another would soon arise usurping the rights and
+prerogatives belonging to Christ alone, claiming to be supreme head of
+the church, sitting as God in the temple of God, and "showing himself
+that _he_ is God." 2 Thes. 2:4.
+
+The attention of John was directed to an object "in the right hand of
+Him that sat on the throne"--a book sealed with seven seals--and to a
+mighty angel calling with a loud voice for some one to come forward and
+loose the seals and open the book. No created intelligence of earth or
+heaven dared to step forward and declare himself able to accomplish the
+result required, and because of this John wept much.
+
+The form of books in use when the Revelation was given was unlike those
+used now. They consisted of strips of parchment or other material,
+longer or shorter, rolled up. The book in the symbolic vision before us
+consisted of a roll containing seven pieces each one rolled and sealed
+separately, so that the outer seal could be broken and the contents of
+its strip read without disturbing the remaining ones. Had the seals all
+been on the outside, nothing could have been read until they were all
+broken; whereas the loosing of each seal was followed by some discovery
+of the contents of the roll.
+
+This book in the hand of God is symbolical of something. Most of the
+commentators think it represents the book of Revelation, in which case,
+of course, it would not include the present description of the book
+itself, but only of its contents as applied to subsequent chapters. But
+this view, of itself, is unsatisfactory for many reasons. The rules
+governing the use and the interpretation of symbolic language would
+forbid the thought of one book's symbolizing another book; for the main
+idea conveyed by the term _symbol_ is, that the symbolic object stands
+as the representative, not of itself, but of something analagous.
+Reasoning by analogy, what would the contents of a sealed book in the
+hand of God symbolize? Evidently, the infinite counsels and purposes
+known only to Jehovah. Its being written within and on the backside
+would indicate that those purposes were full and complete, being all
+written out and understood by him who "knoweth the end from the
+beginning" and "worketh all things after the counsel of his own will."
+Its being sealed denotes that the contents were unrevealed, while its
+being in the right hand of God--the hand of his power--shows that he is
+able to carry into execution his divine purposes and that none shall be
+able to alter them or to wrest them from him.
+
+While the events future of John's time form a part of the great plan and
+counsels of Jehovah, yet it is taking a very limited view of the subject
+to suppose that they alone constitute the sealed book of this vision;
+for then would that greatest of all events, the atonement of Christ and
+the earliest triumphs of the gospel, have no special part in the sealed,
+mysterious counsels of the infinite One. It is much more consistent with
+the characteristics and attributes of God to make this book a symbol,
+not merely of a part, but of all his divine plans and purposes in the
+entire gospel dispensation. This position gains credence from the fact
+that the visions of the Revelation cover many times the whole period
+from the incarnation to the end. When the very first seal is broken, the
+early success and triumphs of the gospel, as experienced in John's
+lifetime, are portrayed. According to the vision before us, it was by
+virtue of Christ's death that he was able to open the book at all; and
+the plan of redemption itself, which is based upon his atonement, is
+declared by the Scriptures to be a "mystery which from the beginning of
+the world hath been _hid in God_." Eph. 3:9. This redemption scheme was
+the great center of attraction to the prophets of the old dispensation,
+who "inquired and searched diligently" that they might comprehend its
+deep mysteries, "which things the _angels desired to look into_." 1 Pet.
+1:10-12.
+
+Now, if the contents of the sealed book were (at the time of this
+vision) only the history of events to be, why was it that no man on
+earth or in heaven, nor even an angel before the throne, was found
+worthy to "look into" it or to communicate its secrets to the children
+of men. Gabriel was sent as a worthy messenger to communicate to Daniel
+a long series of future events reaching even until the end of time. But
+the contents of this roll were such that no created intelligence of
+earth or heaven was able to unfold them. All remained unfathomable
+mystery--until Christ stepped forward in his character as a sacrificial
+Lamb and declared himself able to undertake the task of loosing the
+seals and of opening the book. "Unto you it is given to _know the
+mystery_ of the kingdom of God" (Mark 4:11), he said to his disciples,
+"even the mystery which hath been hid from ages and from generations,
+but now is _made manifest_ to his saints." Col. 1:26. "Verily I say unto
+you, That many prophets and righteous men have desired to see those
+things which ye see, and have not seen them; and to hear those things
+which ye hear, and have not heard them. Blessed are your eyes, for they
+see; and your ears, for they hear." Mat. 13:17, 16.
+
+The fact that the suffering and death of Christ was a past event at the
+time when the Revelation was given does not constitute a valid objection
+to the position taken, that the contents of the sealed book embrace the
+plan of redemption during the entire period of its operation; for the
+reason that, in order to form a complete and continuous narrative, past
+events are frequently referred to in the Apocalypse. Thus, John saw a
+beast with seven heads signifying seven kings; but he was expressly
+informed that "_five are fallen_, one is [exists at present], and the
+other is not yet come." Chap. 17:10.
+
+When Christ appears on the symbolic stage, he is introduced by the elder
+as "the Lion of the tribe of Juda," and "the Root of David." The lion,
+being the king of beasts and the monarch of the forest, is indicative of
+power, such as Christ possesses. Christ is elsewhere denominated "King
+of kings and Lord of lords," and he himself laid claim to "all power in
+heaven and on earth," it having "pleased the Father that in him should
+all fulness dwell." Why he is termed "the Lion of the tribe of Juda," I
+am unable to say, unless the expression is borrowed from the prophecy
+recorded of him in Gen. 49:10--"The sceptre shall not depart from Judah,
+nor a lawgiver from between his feet, until Shiloh come; and unto him
+shall the gathering of the people be." His being the "Root of David"
+shows that he is the source and sustainer of David as to his position
+and power. David was specially ordained of the Lord and sustained by
+him. Of this there can be no doubt. David was a type; Christ is the
+antitype. David's position as ruler over natural Israel constitutes a
+type of Christ's position as ruler over the spiritual Israel; and it is
+in this sense that Christ reigns upon the throne of his father David.
+Luke 1:32, 33. And since Christ came in the line of David's descendants,
+he is called the offspring of David and a rod out of the stem of Jesse.
+Isa. 11:1, 10. His connection with the throne of David being evident, he
+is entitled to the right to reign over his people. The appellation
+_Lamb_ is one of the peculiar titles by which the Son of God is
+designated, having reference to that part of his mission in which he
+constituted a sacrificial offering for sin. His forerunner John was able
+to prophetically discern him in this character, and pointed to him as
+"the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world." John 1:29.
+The Lamb was said to have seven horns and seven eyes. A horn is a symbol
+of power, and seven, being a sacred or perfect number, denotes the
+fulness of power possessed by Christ; while the seven eyes signify the
+seven spirits of God, or the Holy Spirit, which, being under the direct
+control of Christ, is sent forth into the world to effect the
+regeneration of men.
+
+When the Lion of the tribe of Juda stepped forward and undertook the
+task of revealing the secret counsels and purposes of Jehovah to the
+world, immediately a song of praise ascended from the lips of the
+redeemed sons of earth. The song was new, adapted to a new theme, and
+sung on a new occasion. "The four beasts and four and twenty elders fell
+down before the Lamb, having every one of them harps, and golden vials
+[censers] full of odors, which are the prayers of saints. And they sung
+a new song, saying, Thou art worthy to take the book, and to open the
+seals thereof: for thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy
+blood out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation; and hast
+made us unto our God kings and priests, and we shall reign on the
+earth." This song beautifully expresses the honor due to Jesus Christ in
+his office-work as Redeemer of the world, by virtue of which people out
+of every nation, kindred, tongue, and people, are saved unto God and
+made kings and priests on the earth. The angel who appeared to the
+Judean shepherds while they were watching their flocks by night,
+comforted them with the welcome announcement: "Fear not: for, behold, I
+bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to _all people_. For
+unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, which is Christ
+the Lord." Luke 2:10, 11.
+
+Since the preaching of the gospel began, men are instructed to "seek
+first the kingdom of God" (Mat. 6:33), and they "press into it" (Luke
+16:16) by the saving virtue of Him "who hath delivered us from the power
+of darkness, and hath translated us _into the kingdom_ of his dear Son."
+Col. 1:13. Taking our place by the side of the writer of the Revelation,
+we testify with him that we are already "in the kingdom and patience of
+Jesus Christ" (Rev. 1:9), and that we "receive abundance of grace and of
+the gift of righteousness," whereby "we _reign in life_ by one Jesus
+Christ." Rom. 5:17. In this happy condition, redeemed by the blood of
+Jesus, our Savior, made "a royal [kingly] priesthood" in the "holy
+nation" of "peculiar people" that have been gathered out of all nations
+of earth (1 Pet. 2:5, 9), we feel like singing anew this glad song of
+redemption in honor of Jesus, our only Lord and Savior, who is God over
+all, blessed forever! Amen.
+
+This new and rapturous song of the redeemed was immediately caught by a
+greater multitude of the angelic order, an innumerable company, even
+"ten thousand times ten thousand, and thousands of thousands," and
+together, with loud and united voices, did they swell the mighty anthem,
+"Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power, and riches, and
+wisdom, and strength, and honor, and glory, and blessing." And again the
+heavenly strain was raised to loftier heights, until the stupendous
+chorus rolled around the universe, by every creature in heaven and on
+earth, and under the earth, and such as are in the sea, saying,
+"Blessing and honor, and glory, and power, be unto him that sitteth upon
+the throne, and unto the Lamb forever and ever." A few gifted voices of
+earth may possess such power and sweetness as almost to entrance us with
+their melody of song; but what an oratorio will it be, my brethren,
+when, released from the narrow limits of mortality, that sublime strain
+sung by the redeemed of all ages and ten thousand times ten thousand and
+thousands of thousands of angels, bursts in upon our ransomed souls! Did
+human thought ever reach the conception of music like this? Did the eyes
+of a mortal ever behold such rapturous scenes? You may feast your eyes
+upon earth's greatest beauty--Yosemite Valley, Yellowstone Park, Niagara
+Falls, may pass before your vision; you may climb the lofty Alpine
+summit and behold the snow-streaked and snow-capped peaks towering to
+the heavens around you--or you may listen to the best music ever
+composed by a Mozart, a Handel, or a Beethoven, or the finest ever
+executed by a Liszt, a Rubenstein, or a Paderewski; yet I must tell you
+upon the authority of God's word that "eye hath not _seen_, nor ear
+_heard_, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which
+God hath prepared for them that love him." 1 Cor. 2:9.
+
+This vision shows very clearly the lofty position to which Christ has
+been exalted, possessing "a name which is above every name"; for the
+entire company of angels and redeemed saints unite in extolling him with
+songs of praise, and that, too, before the very throne of the Deity and
+in the presence of his infinite Majesty. Surely we can not doubt that
+ours is a divine Savior, and one worthy of all praise, honor, power and
+dominion both now and forever.
+
+Though John beheld this wonderful vision in heaven, yet we must remember
+that it was given and recorded for the benefit of God's people upon
+earth. The plan of redemption was not actually revealed in heaven, for
+"Jesus Christ came _into the world_ to save sinners" (1 Tim. 1:15), and
+it was here that he was ordained to "taste death for every man." Heb.
+2:9. The ransomed company thus brought to view is intended to point out
+the redeemed of earth; for there is no salvation to be obtained in
+heaven, in which place no blood was shed--the blood is one of the agents
+that bears witness in the earth. 1 John 5:7, 8. The central figures of
+this vision were God, the Holy Spirit, and Christ, around whom the
+living creatures and elders were gathered, and they, in turn, were
+surrounded by the angelic throng. This entire scene was doubtless
+intended to represent the exalted character of spiritual things on
+earth, where the plan of redemption was revealed and the redeemed host
+gathered out of all nations. In a very important sense the Father, the
+Son, and the Holy Ghost all dwell in the spiritual church, or new
+Jerusalem, and are thus "in the midst" of God's people, surrounded by
+the redeemed host who unceasingly worship them, and they, in turn, have
+the promise that "the angel of the Lord encampeth round about them"
+(Psa. 34:7); yea, "an innumerable company of angels" reside in this
+"heavenly Jerusalem," or "city of the living God," unto which we, as a
+part of the "general assembly and church of the first-born," "_are
+come_" in this dispensation. Heb. 12:22, 23.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+
+ And I saw when the Lamb opened one of the seals, and I heard, as
+ it were the noise of thunder, one of the four beasts saying,
+ Come and see.
+
+ 2. And I saw, and behold a white horse: and he that sat on him
+ had a bow; and a crown was given unto him: and he went forth
+ conquering, and to conquer.
+
+We have now reached the point where the thrilling interest of this book
+commences. With the opening of the seals of the book of God's purposes
+we have the prophecies of the future, the unfolding of the events to be,
+described under appropriate symbols. The contents of six seals are
+contained in this and the following chapter, while the seventh occupies
+the remainder of the volume.
+
+A word relative to the plan of the prophecies will be appropriate at
+this time. I will again state what will be made very clear
+hereafter--that the events are narrated by series, and not by centuries.
+A particular theme is taken up and carried through to its completion,
+then the narrative returns and another subject is traced to its end.
+Thus, the entire book consists of a number of distinct parallel series
+covering the same ground.
+
+Upon the opening of the first seal, John is summoned as with a voice of
+thunder by one of the living creatures to draw near; and the object that
+meets his vision is a white horse with its rider. The symbol is that of
+a victorious warrior, being drawn from the civil and military life of
+the Romans. The symbol is one of dignity. It does not consist of some
+inanimate object such as a mountain, a sea, or a river, neither is it a
+wild ferocious beast; but it is that of a living, active, intelligent
+being, and he, as denoted by various insignia, a conqueror. He rides a
+white horse, such as victors used in triumphal procession; his bow and
+crown are also symbols of victory. He goes forth conquering and to
+conquer, or to make conquests.
+
+This symbol is a faithful representation of the early triumphs of
+Christianity in its aggressive conflict with the huge systems of error
+with which it had to contend. Some have supposed that the rider
+represented Jesus Christ; but this can not be, for many reasons, two of
+which I will give. First. Christ always appears on the symbolic stage in
+his own character, unrepresented by another, for the reason, as before
+stated, that there is no creature that can analagously represent Him who
+claims equality with God. Not one name or attribute peculiar to him is
+mentioned in the description. Second. There are four horsemen brought to
+view in this chapter, and the symbols all being drawn from the same
+department, must have the same general application. If the first
+horseman symbolizes _a definite personage_, so do the remaining three;
+but we should have great difficulty in identifying the last three,
+giving them an individual application.
+
+Others make the first horseman a symbol of the gospel itself, but the
+gospel is not a living, active, intelligent agent, such as the symbol
+evidently is, but is only a system of the revealed truth. All congruity
+and appropriateness in the comparison is lacking.
+
+But let us give this symbol further consideration. It is not enough that
+its interpretation alone be given, but the reader is justly entitled to
+a knowledge of the process by which we arrive at the truth. In the first
+place, we have a symbol of great dignity and excellence, and we must
+look for an object of corresponding character. The symbol is that of a
+living agent, and consequently, we must look for its fulfillment in an
+active, intelligent agent. The purity, or whiteness, of the horse on
+which the rider was seated would indicate an agency of mild, beneficent
+character. Finally, the symbol is drawn, as before stated, from the
+civil and military life of the Romans. Now, according to the laws of
+symbolic language, a symbol never represents an object like itself, but
+an analagous one in another department. A wild beast does not represent
+a wild beast, but something of analagous character. Seven fat and seven
+lean kine do not represent kine like themselves, but something
+analagous--seven years of plenty and as many of famine. There are only
+two great series of events described in the Revelation--the history of
+ecclesiastical events and the political history of certain nations. The
+present symbol is drawn from one of these departments--the political or
+the civil life of the Romans; and leaving the latter department to find
+its signification in another department, we have no place to go except
+into the department of ecclesiastical affairs. Entering, therefore, the
+spiritual realm, and looking about us for an object that perfectly meets
+every requirement of the symbol, we find it in _the humble ministers of
+Christ_, who boldly went forth in obedience to the divine command to
+extend the peaceful triumphs of the cross and to carry the gospel of the
+kingdom of God "into all the world." Mark 16:15-18; Mat. 28:19, 20. This
+succession of faithful, holy, devoted men is worthy of a place in
+Apocalyptic vision. They went forth "conquering and to conquer"; and the
+victories they gained were such as the world never witnessed before.
+Worthy are they to wear a victor's crown, for they have "fought a good
+fight."
+
+Because of its connection with events following, it is necessary for us
+to consider the divine position of these first ministers of the church.
+Their _equality_ is clearly taught in the New Testament. Christ gave
+them the express command, "Be not ye called Rabbi: for one is your
+Master, even Christ; and all ye are _brethren_." Mat. 23:8. When two of
+the disciples manifested a desire to gain preeminence over their
+brethren and their aspirations displeased the ten, Christ said to them
+all, "Ye know that the princes of the Gentiles exercise dominion over
+them, and they that are great exercise authority upon them. But it
+_shall not be so among you_." Mat. 20:25, 26. Thus a perfect standard of
+equality in the ministry is lifted up. The beloved apostle, the writer
+of the Revelation, when addressing the elders of the seven churches of
+Asia in particular, humbly and affectionately represented himself as
+their "_brother_ and companion in tribulation." Rev. 1:9.
+
+I will now adduce the testimony of several creditable historians, who
+are compelled to admit the humble equality of the New Testament
+ministry, notwithstanding the fact that some of them belonged to
+churches containing a very _unequal_ ministry.
+
+Mosheim says: "The rulers of the church were called their presbyters or
+bishops, which two titles are, in the New Testament, undoubtedly applied
+to the same order of men.... Let no one confound the bishops of this
+primitive and golden period of the church, with those of whom we read in
+the following ages. For, though they were both distinguished by the same
+name, yet they differed extremely, and that in many respects." Vol. I,
+p. 99.
+
+This fact is now admitted by nearly all denominations, even
+Episcopalians. In the work entitled "Episcopacy Tested by Scripture,"
+published by the Protestant Episcopal Tract Society, New York, the
+author, one of their able advocates, makes the following admission
+concerning the title _bishop_ in the New Testament, "that the name is
+there given to the middle order or presbyters; and _all_ that we read in
+the New Testament concerning _bishops_, including of course the words
+_overseer_ and _oversight_, which have the same derivation, is to be
+regarded as pertaining to that middle grade"--the presbyters or elders.
+Page 12.
+
+The noted historian Waddington, also an Episcopalian, makes the same
+admission in the following words: "It is also true that in the earliest
+government of the first Christian society, that of Jerusalem, not the
+elders only, but the 'whole church' were associated with the apostles;
+and it is even _certain_ that the terms _bishop_ and _elder_ or
+_presbyter_ were, in the first instances, and for a short period,
+sometimes used synomously, and indiscriminately applied to the _same
+order_ in the ministry." Church History, Part I, p. 41. The italicizing
+is mine.
+
+The well-known historian Milman, also an Episcopalian, in his History of
+Christianity, says, "The earliest Christian communities appear to have
+been ruled and represented, in the absence of the apostle who was their
+first founder, by their elders, who are likewise called bishops, or
+overseers of the church." Page 194.
+
+Kurtz, in his Church History, says: "To aid them in their work, or to
+supply their places in their absence (Acts 14:23), the apostles ordained
+rulers in every church, who bore the common name of _elders_ from their
+dignity, and of _bishops_ from the nature of their office. That
+originally the elders were the same as the bishops, we gather with
+absolute certainty from the statements of the New Testament and of
+Clement of Rome, a disciple of the apostles. (See his first epistle to
+the Corinthians, Chaps. 42, 44:52.) 1. The presbyters are expressly
+called bishops--compare [the Greek especially] Acts 20:17 with verse 28,
+and Titus 1:5 with verse 7. 2. The office of presbyter is described as
+next to and highest after that of apostle (Acts 15:6, 22). Similarly,
+the elders are represented as those to whom alone the rule, the teaching
+and the care of the church is entrusted (1 Tim. 5:17; 1 Pet. 5:1,
+etc.).... In [several] passages of the New Testament and of Clement we
+read of many bishops in one and the same church. In the face of such
+indubitable evidence, it is difficult to account for the pertinacity
+with which Romish and Anglican theologians insist that these two offices
+had from the first been different in name and functions.... Even Jerome,
+Augustine, Urban II. (1091) and Petrus Lombardus admit that originally
+the two had been identical. It was reserved for the Council of Trent to
+convert this truth into a heresy." Pages 67, 68. Chrysostom, Theodoret,
+and others also admitted the same.
+
+Many similar historical testimonies now lying before me to the humble
+equality of the New Testament ministry could be added; but lest the
+reader become weary, I will conclude with the following beautiful
+description from D'Aubigne in his noted History of the Reformation: "The
+church was in the beginning a community of brethren, guided by a few of
+the _brethren_." Again, "All Christians were priests of the living God,
+with _humble pastors_ as their guides." Vol. I, pp. 35, 50.
+
+With this description of the early ministers of Christ, who went forth
+under the symbol of the first horseman to disciple all nations, we have
+the events pertaining to the early history of the church, laid before
+us; until the opening of the second seal brings us to another important
+phase of its history.
+
+ 3. And when he had opened the second seal, I heard the second
+ beast say, Come and see.
+
+ 4. And there went out another horse that was red: and power was
+ given to him that sat thereon to take peace from the earth, and
+ that they should kill one another: and there was given unto him
+ a great sword.
+
+The symbol of this seal is that of a rider going forth on a red horse
+armed with a great sword with which to take peace from the earth and to
+kill. It is drawn from the same source as that of the preceding one, but
+differing greatly in the character of the horseman and the object of his
+mission. The symbol is one of great dignity--a living, intelligent
+agent--drawn from civil and military life. For the same reason as given
+before, we must go out of the department of civil life into the history
+of religious affairs to find its fulfilment.
+
+Notice, also, the peculiar characteristics of this horseman and wherein
+he differs from that of the first seal. The color of the horse is red,
+denoting something very different from the peace, purity, and benignity
+of the white. Instead of gaining glorious spiritual conquests and
+triumphs, like him of the first seal, he was to take peace from the
+earth. In the place of a victor's crown, he possesses "a great sword"
+with which to kill, denoting an agent of great destruction.
+
+Where shall we look in the history of religious affairs to find the
+object that meets the requirements of this symbol? Who were the active,
+intelligent agents that appeared as the great opposers of the
+establishment of Christianity by the rider of the white horse? We find
+the answer undoubtedly in the propagators of the _Pagan religions_. As
+soon as Christianity began to gain a foothold in the Roman Empire, the
+priests and supporters of Paganism were exasperated to the last degree,
+and they determined to crush out the Christian religion. An example of
+Pagan opposition is found in the nineteenth chapter of Acts, where it is
+recorded that the preaching of the gospel so stirred the people of
+Ephesus that they were filled with wrath and for the space of about two
+hours cried out, saying, "Great is Diana of the Ephesians!" This great
+conflict between Christianity and Paganism will be more fully described
+under other symbols in a subsequent chapter, therefore I will make this
+description brief.
+
+The destruction of life brought about by this rider of the red horse
+doubtless signifies the great slaughter of the Christians at the hands
+of the Pagans. During ten seasons of severe persecution, which occurred
+under the reigns of the emperors Nero, Domitian, Trajan, Marcus
+Aurelius, Septimus Severus, Maximus, Decius, Gallus, Valerian, and
+Diocletian, the Christians suffered every indignity that their
+relentless persecutors could heap upon them. They had their eyes burned
+out with red-hot irons; they were dragged about with ropes until life
+was extinct; they were beheaded, stoned to death, crucified, thrown to
+wild beasts, burned at the stake; yet "they overcame by the blood of the
+Lamb, and by the word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives
+unto the death." Chap. 12:11.
+
+It may appear at first that taking the rider of the horse as a symbolic
+agent but the killing which he effected as literal, is an inconsistency
+and a variation from the laws of symbolic language; but such is not
+necessarily the case. One principle laid down in the beginning was, that
+the description of an object or event must necessarily be literal when
+no symbolic object could be found to analagously represent it. The
+destruction of human life could not well be represented symbolically,
+there being no destruction analagous to it whose meaning would be
+obvious; hence it must appear as a literal description. This is proved
+by many texts in the Revelation that will admit of no other application;
+such as verses 9-11 of this chapter; chapter 13:10; 17:6; etc.
+
+But the literal destruction of life may be chosen as a symbol to
+represent a destruction to which it is plainly analagous; such as the
+destruction of spiritual life, the overthrow of the civil or
+ecclesiastical institutions of society, etc. That it is sometimes
+employed thus as a symbol will be shown clearly in subsequent chapters.
+Hence, in every instance where killing men is the work of a symbolic
+agent, the context, or general series of events with which it is
+connected, must determine whether the literal or symbolical
+signification is intended. In the present prophecy under consideration
+it is much more consistent to give it the literal application; for the
+devotees of Paganism did not destroy the spiritual life of the church,
+which would be an analagous killing; neither did they succeed in
+overthrowing the structure of Christianity.
+
+ 5. And when he had opened the third seal, I heard the third
+ beast say, Come and see. And I beheld, and lo a black horse; and
+ he that sat on him had a pair of balances in his hand.
+
+ 6. And I heard a voice in the midst of the four beasts say, A
+ measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley for a
+ penny; and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine.
+
+This symbol is also that of a horseman, differing from the preceding
+ones only in his characteristics. He is seated upon a black horse,
+denoting something dark or appalling in its nature, the very opposite of
+that of the first seal. He possesses no bow nor crown, but instead he
+has a pair of balances in his hand for weighing food. This he deals out
+only at exorbitant prices--"a measure of wheat for a penny, and three
+measures of barley for a penny." The penny, or denarius, is equal to
+about fifteen cents of our money, and was the ordinary wages of a day
+laborer. In the parable of our Lord recorded in Mat. 20, the householder
+is represented as hiring laborers for a penny a day to labor in his
+vineyard. The measure, or _choenix_, of wheat was the usual daily
+allowance of food for a man. So according to the rate given, it would
+require a day's labor to supply food sufficient for one man, which shows
+an enormous price placed upon these necessaries of life. In ordinary
+times the penny would procure about twenty measures of wheat instead of
+one, and fifty or sixty measures of barley instead of three. Surely this
+represents famine prices.
+
+The expression "see thou hurt not the oil and the wine" seems to have
+some direct connection with the exorbitant schedule of food rates. The
+following facts of history, as recorded by Lord, will serve to make the
+matter clear: "The taxes required in the Roman empire, to sustain the
+court and civil service, the army and desolating wars, and the hungry
+brood of office-holders, as well as to provide largesses to the
+soldiers, were excessive in the extreme, so as to prove an almost
+insupportable burden to the people. The ordinary and economical expenses
+of the government were great; but when we take into view that during a
+period of seventy-two years previous to Diocletian, there were
+twenty-six individuals who held the imperial crown, besides a great
+number of unsuccessful aspirants, and that each of these must secure the
+favor of the army and the people by large donations of money, we may
+well conceive that the taxes and exactions laid to raise the needed
+amount must have proved a crushing burden. They were so great as
+sometimes to strip men of their wealth and reduce them to poverty. These
+were laid upon everything that could be brought into service. Nothing
+was too insignificant to escape.... The taxes might be paid in money, or
+in produce, grain, fruit, oil, or whatever else it might be;... The
+exactions were so excessive that the people were led to avoid them in
+every possible mode, as men always will under such circumstances." Once
+in fifteen years, a Roman indiction, an assessor would go round to levy
+upon the products of the soil, and the assessment was made according to
+the amount of the yield. One method adopted to secure a lower assessment
+at this time was that of mutilating their fruit trees and vines. We find
+among the Roman laws severe enactments against such as "feign poverty,
+or cut a vine, or stint the fruit of a tree" in order to avoid a fair
+valuation, and the penalty attached was the death of the offender and
+the confiscation of all his property. The fact that this law existed
+shows that the offense was committed and also that the exactions of the
+government must have been of the most oppressive kind.
+
+With these facts before us it is easy to discern the nature of the
+symbol, being that of a Roman magistrate prepared to enforce his severe
+exactions upon the people at the exorbitant rate of three measures of
+wheat for a penny and three measures of barley for a penny, accompanied
+by the solemn injunction, "See thou hurt not the oil and the wine," that
+is, the olive-trees and the vines.
+
+It is evident that we must, as before, go out of the department of civil
+and military life into the realm of ecclesiastical history to find the
+true fulfilment of this symbol. The black color of the horse would
+denote something directly opposite to that of the first seal; and since
+the symbol of the first seal represented the establishment of the pure
+gospel of Jesus Christ, this symbol must represent the great apostasy
+and spiritual darkness that covered the world at a later period. And if
+the horseman of the first seal represented the chosen ministry who went
+forth in a glorious mission to win trophies of grace, the horseman of
+this seal must represent _an apostate ministry_, possessing power and
+authority to enforce the severest exactions upon the bread of life, thus
+producing a desolating spiritual famine.
+
+This marvelous change from the humble apostolic ministry to an apostate
+one did not occur suddenly, but by degrees; and as it has a great
+bearing upon other lines of truth to be brought out in subsequent
+chapters, it will be profitable to consider the most important steps by
+which this transformation was effected.
+
+When the desire for precedence or superiority first manifested itself
+among the disciples, Christ repressed it (Mat. 20:25, 26), and it
+appeared no more in their midst; but before the close of the first
+century it is evident that a thirst for preeminence existed in the
+hearts of some who had been the servants of the church. An example of
+this is to be found in Diotrephes, who exalted himself above his
+ministerial associates. The Apostle John says concerning him: "I wrote
+unto the church: but Diotrephes, who loveth to have the preeminence
+among them, receiveth us not. Wherefore if I come, I will remember his
+deeds which he doeth, prating against us with malicious words: and not
+content therewith, neither doth he himself receive the brethren, and
+forbiddeth them that would, and casteth them out of the church." 3 John
+9, 10.
+
+In the historical extracts given in the explanation of the first
+horseman, it is clear that the first ministers were all equal; but a
+time came about the close of the first century when the most influential
+among the clergy grasped the power and exalted themselves to a position
+of authority over the rest. The manner in which this transformation was
+effected is explained by the learned Gieseler as follows: "After the
+death of the apostles, and the pupils of the apostles, to whom the
+general direction of the churches had always been conceded, some one
+amongst the presbyters of each church was suffered gradually to take the
+lead in its affairs. In the same irregular way the title of _bishop_ was
+appropriated to the first presbyter." Eccl. Hist., Vol. I, p. 65. In the
+days when the apostles were active in the affairs of the church there
+were but two classes in the ministry--elders, or bishops, and deacons;
+but when one of the presbyters was exalted to a higher position than the
+rest and assumed to himself the exclusive use of the word bishop, there
+were three classes. To quote the words of Geo. P. Fisher: "After we
+cross the limit of the first century we find that with each board of
+elders there is a person to whom the name of bishop is specially
+applied, although, for a long time, he is likewise often called a
+presbyter. In other words, in the room of a two-fold, we have a
+three-fold ministry." Hist. of the Christian Church, p. 51.
+
+The height to which the single bishop of authority in a church had been
+exalted is well illustrated in the Ignatian Epistles. Ignatius was
+bishop of Antioch and was condemned by the emperor Trajan to suffer
+death by being thrown to the wild beasts in the amphitheatre in Rome.
+His execution in this manner took place Dec. 20, A.D. 107. He wrote a
+number of epistles, a few extracts from which I will give. "Wherefore it
+is fitting that ye should run together in accordance with the will of
+your bishop, which thing also ye do. For your justly renowned
+presbytery, worthy of God, is fitted as exactly to the bishop as the
+strings are to the harp." To the Ephesians, Chap. 4. "See that ye all
+follow the bishop, even as Jesus Christ does the Father.... Let no man
+do anything connected with the church without the bishop." To the
+Smyrnaean's, Chap. 8. "It is not lawful without the bishop either to
+baptize or to celebrate a love-feast; but whatsoever he shall approve
+of, that is also pleasing to God." Smyrnaean's, Chap. 8. "It is well to
+reverence both God and the bishop. He who honors the bishop has been
+honored of God; but he who does anything without the knowledge of the
+bishop, does [in reality] serve the devil." Smyrnaean's, Chap. 9.
+
+The power of these bishops advanced steadily during the second century.
+The churches of the cities where they were located extended themselves
+into the surrounding country and smaller towns, and the presbyters or
+elders of these inferior churches were presided over by the bishop of
+their mother church, and in this manner the great system of diocesan
+episcopacy was developed.[3]
+
+[Footnote 3: The ancient signification of the term _diocese_ must not be
+confounded with the modern usage of the term. It then designated a
+territory or district, usually containing a number of minor churches,
+presided over by one bishop.]
+
+In the latter part of the second century when the disputes concerning
+Easter and Montanism arose, the custom of diocesan bishops consulting
+with each other on important doctrines began, and this developed in the
+third century into regular provincial synods, or councils. On account of
+the ecclesiastical or political importance of the cities in which they
+were located, certain bishops had a special deference given them, and
+they were not slow to take advantage of the opportunity to exalt
+themselves to the presidency of these councils; and in a very short time
+they possessed immense power and constituted entirely a separate order,
+designated by the term metropolitan.
+
+The manner in which this important step in the great apostasy was taken
+and the effects produced thereby is well described in the words of the
+historian Mosheim (referring to events of the third century), from whom
+I quote: "In process of time, all the Christian churches of a province
+were formed into one large ecclesiastical body, which, like confederate
+states, assembled at certain times, in order to deliberate about the
+common interests of the whole.... These councils ... _changed the whole
+face of the church_, and gave it a new form; for by them the ancient
+privileges of the people were considerably diminished, and the power and
+authority of the bishops greatly augmented.... At their first appearance
+in these general councils, they acknowledged that they were no more than
+the delegates of their respective churches, and that they acted in the
+name, and by the appointment of their people. But they soon changed this
+humble tone, imperceptibly extended the limits of their authority,
+turned their influence into dominion, and their councils into laws; and
+openly asserted, at length, that Christ had empowered them to prescribe
+to his people, _authoritative rules of faith and manners_.... The order
+and decency of these assemblies required that some one of the provincial
+bishops met in council, should be invested with a _superior_ degree of
+power and authority; and hence the rights of _metropolitans_ derive
+their origin."--Church History, Cent. II, Part 2.
+
+When a usurping clergy grasps the power to prescribe "authoritative
+rules of faith and manners," to employ the words of Mosheim, we may well
+conceive that the true amount of pure spiritual food was exceedingly
+small and could be procured only at starvation rates. He who reads the
+ecclesiastical events of the third century will find it only too true
+that many of the cardinal virtues of apostolic Christianity were almost
+lost sight of and that a great spiritual famine existed in the earth
+over which this dark horseman of the third seal careered. Instead of
+salvation through the Spirit of God being carefully taught, baptismal
+regeneration was exalted, and the people were instructed in the saving
+virtues of the eucharist. The Platonic idea concerning sin having its
+seat in the flesh was adopted, and therefore perfect victory or
+sanctification was made to consist in the mortification of the natural
+appetites and desires of the body, with the result that a life of
+fasting, celibacy, or self-inflicted torture was looked upon as the
+surest means of obtaining the favor of Heaven. The writings of such
+eminent church Fathers as Tertullian, Origen, Cyprian and others now
+lying before me, contain the surest evidences of the woeful extent to
+which this dark cloud of superstition and error had settled down over
+the world during the period of which I write.
+
+ 7. And when he had opened the fourth seal, I heard the voice of
+ the fourth beast say, Come and see.
+
+ 8. And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that sat
+ on him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was
+ given unto them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with
+ sword, and with hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of
+ the earth.
+
+The usual interpretation given this horse and its rider is to apply it
+to the desolating wars and famines that occurred in the Roman Empire.
+This view is embodied in the celebrated painting "Death on the Pale
+Horse," in which death is represented as going forth with war,
+pestilence, famine, and wild beasts, to ravage the Roman empire. We are
+informed by historians that dreadful pestilences and famines did prevail
+and in some places nearly depopulated the country, and that the
+remaining inhabitants could not make head against the beasts that
+multiplied in the land. But the fact that such events occurred is not
+sufficient proof that this symbol has reference to such. Famines and
+pestilences may have occurred many times without forming a part of the
+Apocalyptic vision.
+
+The greatest objection to giving this part of the vision such a literal
+interpretation is, that it fails to bring out its symbolic character. To
+what, then, does it refer? We have, as before, a horseman, indicating
+that the agent is one of the same general character, differing mainly in
+his features and mission. This horse was of a livid, cadaverous hue,
+denoting an agent of ghastly, terrible nature. The living rider bore the
+awful name of "Death," or as in the original, "The Death," by way of
+emphasis. Death literally was not the agent--it is not so stated--but
+the rider was termed The Death, or The Destroyer, because of his
+terrible mission; and Hell followed with him.
+
+Applying the laws of symbolic language as heretofore, it is evident that
+this symbol represents a great persecuting ecclesiastical power. And
+with this thought before us, we can scarcely fail to recognize it as a
+true description of _the Papacy_. The great apostasy, described under
+the preceding seal, prepared the way for the final and complete
+establishment of the "man of sin"; but during the period there brought
+to view the ministers of religion, power-seeking and apostate as they
+were, were unable to enforce their claims by the power of persecution.
+Under the present seal, however, is represented a later stage of their
+corruption, when a great hierarchal system, sustained and upheld by the
+arm of civil power, was able to bear tyrannical rule over a great
+portion of the earth. During this period clerical ambition and
+usurpation reached its greatest height.
+
+After speaking of the power possessed by the metropolitans, Mosheim
+says: "The universal church had now the appearance of one vast republic,
+formed by a combination of a great number of little states. This
+occasioned the creation of a new order of ecclesiastics, who were
+appointed in different parts of the world, as _heads_ of the church, and
+whose office it was to preserve the consistence and union of that
+immense body, whose members were so widely dispersed throughout the
+nations. Such was the nature and office of the Patriarchs." Church
+History, Cent. II, part 2.
+
+Thus, the bishops, or metropolitans, of certain of the most important
+cities were exalted to a still higher position as special _heads_ of the
+church. They were termed _Exarchs_ at first, after the title of the
+provincial governors, but afterwards received the more ecclesiastical
+appellation _Patriarchs_. The term Patriarch had been in use for a long
+time in the church signifying merely a bishop, irrespective of the
+dignity he possessed, but it was finally limited to this higher class of
+the clergy, in which sense I now employ it. The cities that first
+enjoyed this chief distinction were Alexandria, Rome, and Antioch. The
+general council of Nice (A.D. 325) in its sixth canon recognized the
+superior authority already possessed by these cities. See D'Aubigne's
+Hist, of Reformation, Vol. I, p. 41. The general council of
+Constantinople in its third canon placed the bishop of Constantinople in
+the same rank with the other three Patriarchs; and the general council
+of Calcedon exalted the See of Jerusalem to a similar dignity, doubtless
+because of its ancient importance as the birthplace of Christianity.
+Thus, Patriarchs were established in the five political capitals of the
+Roman empire; and they were considered the "_heads of the church_,"
+having spiritual authority over the whole empire. These were the only
+Patriarchates of importance. Certain ecclesiastics of the Church of Rome
+even at the present time bear the honorary title Patriarch; but, to
+quote the words of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, "In a strictly technical
+sense, however, that church recognizes only five Patriarchates, those of
+Constantinople, Alexandria, Jerusalem, Antioch, and Rome." Art.
+Patriarch. In the years 637 to 640 Jerusalem, Alexandria, and Antioch
+fell into the hands of the Saracen followers of Mohammed, which
+terminated their importance, and later the Greek schism separated the
+Patriarch of Constantinople from Rome; and thus the Patriarch of Rome
+was left in undisputed possession of the field and was soon recognized
+as universal head of the church. So under the symbol of this dread rider
+on a pale horse is portrayed the great hierarchal system by which the
+Papacy was fully developed in the West.
+
+It is fitting that we notice particularly the agents of destruction
+employed by this rider. He possesses a sword with which to kill--the
+same instrument wielded by the rider of the red horse--but it is evident
+that he uses it with more terrific energy, by reason of which he
+receives the name Death, or The Destroyer. It is possible, also, that in
+this case a sword, wielded by the hand of an ecclesiastical power, may
+be used as a symbol of a spiritual cutting off, or excommunication. The
+sword of excommunication has been the most terrible ever wielded by
+human hand. When this pale horseman was careering over the world in the
+zenith of his power, excommunication and interdiction were the terror of
+individuals and the scourge of nations. At his word the rights of an
+individual as king, ruler, husband or father, nay, even as a _man_, were
+forfeited, and he was shunned like one infected with the leprosy. At his
+command the offices of religion were suspended in a nation, and its dead
+lay unburied, until its proud ruler humbled himself at the feet of the
+ecclesiastical tyrant who bore rule over the "fourth part of the
+earth."[4]
+
+[Footnote 4: This tyranny of the Popes is well illustrated by the
+quarrel that took place between Hildebrand (Pope Gregory VII.) and Henry
+IV. of Germany. Gregory attempted to make certain reforms, but Henry
+refused to recognize those innovations. Gregory excommunicated the
+emperor, with the result that he was "shunned as a man accursed by
+Heaven." His authority lost and his kingdom on the point of going to
+pieces, Henry had but one thing to do--seek the pardon of the Pope. He
+found the Pontiff at Canoosa, but Gregory refused to admit the penitent
+to his presence. "It was winter, and for three successive days the king,
+clothed in sackcloth, stood with bare feet in the snow of the court-yard
+of the palace, waiting for permission to kneel at the feet of the
+Pontiff and to receive forgiveness." On the fourth day he was granted
+admittance to the presence of the Pope.
+
+During the Pontificate of Innocent III. Philip Augustus, king of France,
+put away his wife. Innocent commanded him to take her back and forced
+submission by means of an interdict. This submission of a brave, firm,
+and victorious prince shows the tremendous power wielded by the Popes in
+that period.
+
+The manner, also, in which Innocent III. humbled King John of England
+affords another illustration of the power of the Popes. John caused the
+vacant See of Canterbury to be filled, in accordance with the regular
+manner of election, by one of his favorites. Innocent declared the
+appointment void, as he desired that the place should be filled by one
+of his friends. John refused to allow the Pope's archbishop to enter
+England as Primate. Innocent then excommunicated John, laid all England
+under an interdict, and incited Philip, king of France, to war, offering
+him John's kingdom upon the very liberal condition that he go over and
+take it. The outcome of the matter was that John was compelled to yield
+to the power of the Pope. He even gave him England as a perpetual fief,
+and agreed to pay the Papal See the annual sum of one thousand marks.]
+
+The loss of life by spiritual famine was extreme. The Word of God, which
+is spirit and life to God's people (Jno. 6:63), was laid under interdict
+and the common people deprived of its benefits. At the time the black
+horse appeared, a little food could be obtained at famine prices; but
+when the fourth arrived, he was empowered to kill "with hunger." Also,
+one of his agents of destruction was death, or pestilence, a fit symbol
+of false and blasphemous doctrines breathed forth like a deadly
+pestilence blasting everything within its reach. Invocation of saints,
+worship of images, relics, celibacy, works of supererogation,
+indulgences, and purgatory--these were the enforced principles of
+religion, and like a pest they settled down upon the people everywhere.
+
+This rider also brought into operation "the beasts of the earth" to aid
+him in his destructive work. To kill with sword or hunger shows that
+such work of destruction is performed solely by him who has it in his
+power; but to kill with beasts indicates that _they_ perform the deadly
+work according _to their own natures_. Nothing is clearer than the fact
+that wild beasts stand as a symbol of persecuting tyrannical
+governments; hence we are to understand that this rider was to employ
+also the arm of civil power to aid him in the deadly work. How
+strikingly this represents the historical facts of the case! In all
+truly Roman Catholic countries the civil governments were only a cipher
+or tool in the hands of the church, and the ecclesiastics were the real
+rulers of the kingdom. But whenever any dark work of persecution was to
+be performed, the wild beast was let loose to accomplish the result.
+When charged, however, with the bloody work, the Catholics always
+answer, "Oh, we _never persecute_--don't you see, it is the wild beasts
+that are covered with gore--our hands are clean," yet they themselves
+held the chain that bound the savage monsters. We shall have occasion in
+a subsequent chapter to trace further the pathway of this dread rider as
+he reels onward in the career of ages, "drunken with the blood of the
+saints."
+
+This work of destruction performed by the dread rider on the pale horse
+is considered by many as a literal description of the persecutions of
+the Papacy. While Catholics usually charge the civil powers with this
+bloody work, it is an undeniable fact of history that the Popes often
+ordered or sanctioned crusades against the Waldenses, Albigenses, and
+other peoples (see remarks on verses 9-11, chap. 17:6), in which the
+sword, starvation, and every other means of cruelty imaginable were
+brought into use to exterminate the so-called heresy. And in view of the
+fact explained in the comments on verses 3 and 4 of this chapter, that
+_killing_ is sometimes to be understood in a literal sense on account of
+there being nothing to analagously represent such destruction of life,
+it is not a violation of the laws of symbolic language thus to interpret
+it. It might be consistent in this case to give it a twofold
+application; the agreeing facts of history regarding the Papacy strongly
+suggest it. Thus, the _sword_ could signify a literal destruction of
+life, as in verse 4, and also, in the present case, an ecclesiastical
+cutting off by the Papacy, or excommunication; and _hunger_ could
+signify literal death by starvation, and also, as in verses 5 and 6, a
+destruction of spiritual life, etc.
+
+Where, let me ask, in the whole compass of human writings can be found a
+series of events of such thrilling interest, so great in magnitude, as
+is contained in these eight verses? Who but the Omnipotent could have
+conceived such a wonderful development of the power of iniquity and with
+such master-strokes of power compressed them into so small a scene of
+symbolic imagery? The impress of divinity is here speaking from every
+line.
+
+ 9. And when he had opened the fifth seal, I saw under the altar
+ the souls of them that were slain for the word of God, and for
+ the testimony which they held:
+
+ 10. And they cried with a loud voice, saying, How long, O Lord,
+ holy and true, dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them
+ that dwell on the earth?
+
+ 11. And white robes were given unto every one of them; and it
+ was said unto them, that they should rest yet for a little
+ season, until their fellowservants also and their brethren, that
+ should be killed as they were, should be fulfilled.
+
+Upon the opening of this seal the scene changes entirely. No more
+horsemen appear, but instead the souls of the martyrs are seen at the
+altar crying for vindication of their blood upon the cruel oppressors of
+earth. The question arises, Are these souls symbols of something else,
+or are they what they are here stated to be, "the souls of them that
+were slain"? Evidently, the latter, appearing under their own name and
+character, because they can not properly be symbolized. They were
+disembodied spirits, and where is there anything of analagous character
+to represent such? Angels can not; for whenever they are employed as
+symbols, it is to designate distinguished agencies among men. They
+therefore appear under their own appropriate title as "the _souls_ of
+them that were slain."
+
+These souls appeared "under the altar," that is, _at the foot of the
+altar_, being the same as that described in chap. 8:3--"And another
+angel came and stood at the altar, having a golden censer, and there was
+given unto him much incense, that he should offer it with the prayers of
+all saints upon the golden altar which was before the throne." Thus, the
+heavenly world, as opened up before John, appeared symbolized after the
+sanctuary of the temple in which stood the golden altar, or altar of
+incense. Some have supposed that the brazen altar was the one referred
+to, signifying the living sacrifice these souls made of themselves to
+God. But there is no altar mentioned in the symbols except the golden
+altar. Besides, these were not sacrificial victims; for Christ was made
+a complete sacrifice for sin, while these only suffered martyrdom
+because of their faithfulness to the cause of Christ. It is much more
+reasonable to suppose that their interceding cries went up from the
+golden altar, where the "prayers of all saints" ascended with much
+incense.
+
+Their prayers to God for the avenging of their blood shows the
+expectation on their part that the judgments of Heaven would descend
+upon the cruel and haughty persecutors and oppressors of earth, and
+their surprise was that the day of retribution had been so long delayed.
+The history of the church as developed under the preceding seals gives
+particular force to this cry of the martyrs. For nearly three centuries
+the civil power of Pagan Rome had been employed to crush the cause of
+God. During ten terrible seasons of persecution they had been crucified,
+slain with the sword, sawn asunder, devoured by beasts in the arena, and
+given to the flames. When Constantine, a nominal Christian emperor,
+ascended the throne and protected religion by law, it was believed that
+persecutions must cease; but soon the discovery was made that the sword
+had only changed hands, there having risen an ecclesiastical hierarchy
+destined to "glut itself upon the blood of which heathen Rome had only
+tasted." The world was now made the arena for the terrible coursings of
+the pale horseman, and the "beasts of the earth" were let loose to fall
+with savage fury upon their helpless victims, until millions lost their
+lives at the instigation of the apostate Church of Rome. Is it any
+wonder that the souls of these martyrs should cry unto God for the
+vindication of their righteous blood?
+
+It is said that "white robes were given unto every one of them." By
+referring to chap. 3:4; 7:9, 13, 14, it will be seen that "white
+garments" and "white robes" are sometimes used as a symbol to describe a
+part of the heavenly inheritance. The martyr-spirits, although impatient
+at the delay of avenging judgment, received a righteous reward. But the
+period of tribulation to the church was not yet over. The cup of
+iniquity in the hands of her enemies was not yet full, and they were
+told to "rest for a little season, until their fellowservants also, and
+their brethren, that should be killed as they were, should be
+fulfilled." The account given seems to indicate an important epoch, a
+period in which the martyrs had reason to expect the vindication of
+their righteous blood, but which, instead, was to be followed by another
+great period of persecution. Considering the time of the events already
+described in this series of prophecy, we have no difficulty in fixing
+the chronology of this event at the dividing-point between the era of
+Papal supremacy and the age of Protestantism--or at the Reformation of
+the Sixteenth Century. Did severe slaughter and persecution follow the
+Reformation? Witness the reign of Mary Tudor, frequently styled "Bloody
+Mary." During three years of her reign, 1555 to 1558, two hundred and
+eighty-eight were _burnt alive_ in England! Think of the inhuman
+massacre of the innocent Waldenses of southern France by the violent
+bigot Oppede (1545), who slew eight hundred men in one town, and thrust
+the women into a barn filled with straw and reduced the whole to
+ashes--only a sample of his barbarity; or of their oppression in
+southern Italy by Pope Pius IV. (1560), at whose command they were slain
+by thousands, the throats of eighty-eight men being cut on one occasion
+by a single executioner! Witness the horrible massacre of St.
+Bartholomew in Paris (Aug. 21, 1572), when the Queen dowager, the
+infamous Catherine de Medici, lured immense numbers of the innocent
+Hugenots into the city under the pretext of witnessing a marriage
+between the Hugenot Henry, king of Navarre, and the sister of Charles
+IX., king of France--when the gates were closed and the work of
+wholesale slaughter began at a given signal and raged for three days,
+during which time from six to ten thousand were butchered in Paris
+alone! Think of the rivers of blood in the Netherlands, where the Duke
+of Alva boasted that in the short space of six weeks he had put eighteen
+thousand to death! Witness the dragoonading methods and other inhuman
+persecutions to "wear out the saints of the Most High," that followed
+the revocation of the Edict of Nantes (1685) by Louis XIV., king of
+France, during whose reign three hundred thousand were brutally
+butchered--while Pope Innocent XI. extolled the king by special letter
+as follows: "The Catholic church shall most assuredly record in her
+sacred annals a _work of such devotion toward her_, and CELEBRATE YOUR
+NAME WITH NEVER-DYING PRAISES ... for _this most excellent
+undertaking_"!! My heart sickens with horror in the contemplation of
+such events. Eternal God! can thy righteous eye behold such
+heart-rending scenes of earth, and thy hand of power not be extended to
+humble to the dust these cruel, haughty oppressors of thy people?
+
+ 12. And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal, and, lo,
+ there was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as
+ sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as blood;
+
+ 13. And the stars of heaven fell unto the earth, even as a
+ fig-tree casteth her untimely figs, when she is shaken of a
+ mighty wind.
+
+ 14. And the heaven departed as a scroll when it is rolled
+ together; and every mountain and island were moved out of their
+ places.
+
+ 15. And the kings of the earth, and the great men, and the rich
+ men, and the chief captains, and the mighty men, and every
+ bondman, and every free man, hid themselves in the dens and in
+ the rocks of the mountains;
+
+ 16. And said to the mountains and rocks, Fall on us, and hide us
+ from the face of him that sitteth on the throne, and from the
+ wrath of the Lamb;
+
+ 17. For the great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be
+ able to stand?
+
+Upon the opening of this seal the scene changes again. The symbols are
+all drawn from an entirely different source. We are taken out of the
+department of civil life into the scenes of nature, which is a clear
+evidence that the history of the church is no longer under
+consideration. Had God intended to here continue her history, he would
+no doubt have employed symbols derived from the same source as those
+preceding, so as to prevent our being led astray. No more horsemen or
+living characters appear, but we behold the most terrific convulsions of
+nature--a mighty earthquake, the darkening of the sun and the moon, the
+falling of the stars, and finally the dissolution of the heavens,
+together with the mountains and the islands being removed. If the
+history of the church is no longer under consideration, this great
+change of symbols directs us with absolute certainty into the political
+and civil world for their fulfilment. Of course, we are not to suppose
+that this is a literal description.
+
+In this manner the dignity and the excellence in the use and the
+interpretation of symbols is preserved. To describe the religious
+history of the church, noble symbols chosen from the department of human
+life are selected; while symbols drawn from an inferior department--that
+of nature--are chosen to represent political affairs. This point will
+appear very clear as we proceed in the interpretation of the Apocalypse.
+It is just what we might naturally expect.
+
+The question may be asked, If these symbols from nature represent
+political affairs, where in the events of civil history shall we look
+for their fulfilment? Every one will readily perceive the analogy
+between an earthquake and a political revolution, when all society is in
+a state of agitation as when the solid earth trembles. It is also
+evident that the sun, moon, and stars bear the same analagous
+relationship to the earth that kings, rulers, and princes do to the body
+politic; while the firmament of heaven is analagous to the entire fabric
+of civil government, the symbolic heaven in which the symbolic orbs are
+set to give light.
+
+The symbols, then, point us to the most terrible revolutions--when
+society is in a state of agitation, when kingdoms are overthrown and
+their rulers and princes thrown from their positions or made objects of
+the most gloomy terror; yea, when the entire fabric of civil government
+is finally overthrown and all the institutions and organizations of
+society are swept away as with a tornado. This is the time of
+consternation to the great men of earth, when they shall hide
+"themselves in the dens and in the rocks of the mountains," and say to
+the mountains and rocks, "Fall on us and hide us from the face of him
+that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb: for the
+great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be able to stand?" This is
+the time that the martyrs looked forward to when they cried, "How long,
+O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them
+that dwell on the earth?" A large portion of the Apocalypse is occupied
+with the history of these persecuting powers, civil and ecclesiastical.
+It is their dominacy that constitutes the long period of tribulation to
+the church, when the witnesses prophesy in sackcloth and the faithful
+are ground into the dust by the feet of these proud oppressors as they
+stand in the high places of the earth. But the cries of the slaughtered
+saints have ascended to the throne as incense; God speaks; the judgments
+of Heaven descend upon these lofty ones; and a voice from heaven
+declares, "They have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and _thou
+hast given them blood to drink_; for they are worthy."
+
+This is surely a striking combination of symbols, and the way they are
+arranged would indicate that their fulfilment occupied a considerable
+period of time. First we have a great earthquake, afterwards the
+darkening of the sun and the moon, with the falling of the stars, and
+finally the dissolution of the heavens themselves, with the sweeping
+away of mountains and islands. This description covers the same period
+as that described under the seven last plagues, beginning with certain
+fearful revolutions in which the nations that had slaughtered the
+millions of God's people were given "blood to drink," and ending finally
+in "the great day of his wrath" that shall sweep them from their
+positions eternally. The full explanation of these events can not at
+present be appreciated by the reader, therefore I reserve it for the
+future, to be more fully developed under other symbols.
+
+In these six seals we have a vivid outline of mighty events, political
+and ecclesiastical, extending from the earliest stage of Christianity to
+the end of time. This description in advance was no mere human
+production. No human foresight would have detected, and no mortal mind
+would have conceived, events so wonderful and so farreaching in their
+character. Any other history would sooner have been imagined. It takes
+divine wisdom to understand the true position of the church in the
+present, and she can scarcely read her past history by natural wisdom
+alone, much less outline the future. First the establishment of
+Christianity is symbolized, then the violence of the Pagan party, the
+apostasy, and final establishment of the "man of sin," until the
+millions of earth are crushed by the spiritual tyranny or by the arm of
+civil power, and the cry of the martyrs goes up "How long, O Lord?" But
+they are told to rest "a little season," when they shall witness the
+hand of God laid upon these persecuting nations of earth, convulsing
+them in the most fearful revolutions, and ending finally in their
+complete overthrow in that last "great day of God Almighty."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+ And after these things I saw four angels standing on the four
+ corners of the earth, holding the four winds of the earth, that
+ the wind should not blow on the earth, nor on the sea, nor on
+ any tree.
+
+ 2. And I saw another angel ascending from the east, having the
+ seal of the living God: and he cried with a loud voice to the
+ four angels, to whom it was given to hurt the earth and the sea.
+
+ 3. Saying, Hurt not the earth, neither the sea, nor the trees,
+ till we have sealed the servants of our God in their foreheads.
+
+ 4. And I heard the number of them which were sealed: and there
+ were sealed an hundred and forty and four thousand of all the
+ tribes of the children of Israel.
+
+ 5. Of the tribe of Juda were sealed twelve thousand. Of the
+ tribe of Reuben were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Gad
+ were sealed twelve thousand.
+
+ 6. Of the tribe of Aser were sealed twelve thousand. Of the
+ tribe of Nepthalim were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of
+ Manasses were sealed twelve thousand.
+
+ 7. Of the tribe of Simeon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the
+ tribe of Levi were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of
+ Issachar were sealed twelve thousand.
+
+ 8. Of the tribe of Zabulon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the
+ tribe of Joseph were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of
+ Benjamin were sealed twelve thousand.
+
+A clear understanding of the two visions in the chapter before us can be
+obtained only by considering the plan of the prophecy already referred
+to. The events are narrated by series. A particular theme is taken up
+and followed through to its completion; then the narrative returns and
+another theme is introduced. But this is not all. Whenever the history
+of abounding error or iniquity is set forth, we have in immediate
+connection and in perfect contrast therewith a history of the true
+people of God; thus, the contemporaneous history of righteousness and
+iniquity, truth and error, a true church and a false one. The visions of
+this chapter cover the same period of time as the events described in
+the preceding chapter, but form the most perfect contrast. The student
+of Revelation who unfolds the dark history of apostasy and iniquity
+contained in the preceding seals might naturally be led to ask, Is this
+the melancholy end of God's church? Does it deteriorate rapidly and turn
+out so badly, after all? As an answer to these questions, God gives us
+next a history of his own people, showing that he preserved his own
+church complete, although Antichrist reigned in power.
+
+The principal points in the vision before us are the tempestuous winds
+about to descend upon the earth, and the sealing of God's servants. The
+first of these, being drawn from nature, would lead us to look for its
+fulfilment in political events; while the latter, derived from human
+life, directs us into the affairs of the church. The "four winds of the
+earth" from the "four corners of the earth" signify all the winds from
+every direction--the cardinal points of the compass; while the four
+angels signify all the agencies that have control of these winds, which
+for the present are held in restraint in order to give opportunity for
+the sealing of the Lord's servants. _Angels_ in the Scripture is
+frequently used to denote evil agencies as well as good, the context
+determining which is meant. See Chap. 12:7. The design of the winds was
+to "hurt the earth, the sea, and the trees."
+
+What, let me ask, in the political world is analagous to tempestuous
+storms sweeping over the earth? What but huge masses of men, excited by
+fierce passions, precipitating themselves upon the inhabitants of an
+empire, sweeping everything before them in the fury of their march and
+spreading desolation on every side? In the symbols of the next chapter
+we find that just such hordes of men--barbarians--under their angels, or
+leaders, precipitated themselves upon the Roman empire; and the fearful
+effects upon the earth, the sea, and the green trees produced thereby,
+is particularly detailed. For the present, however, they are held under
+restraint until the sealing of the servants of God should be
+accomplished, then they were to go forward in their work of destruction.
+
+The sealing of the servants is not making them the people of God, but
+rather marking or designating them as such, just as later we find the
+devotees of a corrupt apostate church specified as having the "mark of
+the beast." Considerable light can be thrown upon the subject of the
+sealing of God's servants and of the mark of the beast by consulting
+Roman history for the origin of such expressions. The many conquests of
+the Roman arms furnished so many prisoners that they became a drug in
+the slave-markets of the world, and were so numerous that in many places
+they outnumbered the Roman citizens ten to one. In the first century
+before Christ it is said that some Sicilian estates were worked by as
+many as twenty thousand slaves. "That each owner might know his own, the
+poor creatures were _branded like cattle_." The "mark of the beast"
+possessed by the followers of a false communion will be found to consist
+of an Antichristian spirit by which they are filled with "doctrines of
+devils." So, also, "the seal of the living God" consists of the giving
+of the Holy Spirit, by which his people are led into all truth. See John
+14:26. While Sabbatarians vainly try to prove that keeping the seventh
+day is the seal of God in this dispensation, yet there is not one text
+of Scripture that hints such a thing, but, on the contrary, the
+Scriptures are against them. "Grieve not the _Holy Spirit_ of God
+whereby _ye are sealed_ unto the day of redemption." Eph. 4:30. Again,
+the Word of God says, "Now he which stablished us with you in Christ,
+and hath anointed us is God; who hath also sealed us, and given the
+earnest of the Spirit in our hearts." 2 Cor. 1:21, 22. The time this
+sealing of the people of God takes place is thus described: "_After_
+that ye believed, ye were _sealed_ with that Holy Spirit of promise."
+Eph. 1:13. The winds of heaven were restrained until the work of _full
+salvation_ could be firmly established in the earth. When Christ
+appeared, the Roman empire was in a state of comparative quiet, and the
+immense hosts of foreign invaders did not appear until the firm
+establishment of Christianity, being held back by the power of God until
+his work should be accomplished.
+
+In the description of the sealing given, twelve thousand were selected
+from each of the twelve tribes. Some have supposed this to have
+reference solely to salvation work among the Jewish nation; but that
+would be adopting the literal mode of interpretation, thus destroying
+its symbolic character. The twelve tribes are chosen from the proper
+department to represent the church or "Israel of God" in this
+dispensation, irrespective of nationality. The twelve gates in the wall
+of the heavenly city are named after the twelve tribes of the children
+of Israel (chap. 21:12), showing that it is only through "Israel" that
+any one can enter the New Jerusalem. Since the gospel is given to all
+nations, this can not signify literal Israel. "The children of the
+promise are counted for the seed." Rom. 9:8. "If ye be Christ's, then
+are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise." Gal. 3:29.
+Since the vision is symbolical, we are to consider the numbers given as
+symbolical also, the definite number of twelve thousand from each of the
+tribes showing that the church of God was _complete and perfect_, no
+part being omitted.
+
+ 9. After this I beheld, and, lo, a great multitude, which no man
+ could number, of all nations, and kindreds, and people, and
+ tongues, stood before the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed
+ with white robes, and palms in their hands;
+
+ 10. And cried with a loud voice, saying, Salvation to our God
+ which sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb.
+
+ 11. And all the angels stood round about the throne, and about
+ the elders and the four beasts, and fell before the throne on
+ their faces, and worshipped God,
+
+ 12. Saying, Amen: Blessing, and glory, and wisdom, and
+ thanksgiving, and honor, and power, and might, be unto our God
+ for ever and ever. Amen.
+
+ 13. And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, What are
+ these which are arrayed in white robes? and whence came they?
+
+ 14. And I said unto him, Sir, thou knowest. And he said to me,
+ These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have
+ washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the
+ Lamb.
+
+ 15. Therefore are they before the throne of God, and serve him
+ day and night in his temple: and he that sitteth on the throne
+ shall dwell among them.
+
+ 16. They shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; neither
+ shall the sun light on them, nor any heat.
+
+ 17. For the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed
+ them, and shall lead them unto living mountains of waters: and
+ God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.
+
+In this scene the vision is carried forward to the close of the long
+period of tribulation and persecution to the church of God, when all her
+enemies are finally overthrown; and here are the glorious results, the
+harvest gathered: a great multitude whom no man can number, gathered out
+of all nations, and kindreds, and peoples, and tongues, standing before
+the throne and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in
+their hands, the symbols of their victory. The scene is laid in heaven,
+and refers undoubtedly to the end of time when the heavenly world will
+be opened up to all the faithful who have suffered for Christ amid the
+trials and the oppositions through which his church is called to pass in
+this present world. We are expressly informed by one of the elders who
+these are in white robes and whence they came, so there can be no
+question respecting them. This is the glorious company of the redeemed
+of all ages who "came out of great tribulation, and have washed their
+robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. Therefore they are
+before the throne of God, and serve him day and night in his temple; and
+he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them. They shall hunger
+no more, neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun light on them,
+nor any heat." What a contrast with the scenes of earth, when oppressed
+by famine, and cold, and nakedness, and peril, and sword, they were
+killed all the day long! But their sufferings are over; "for the Lamb
+which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and shall lead them
+unto living fountains of waters and God shall wipe away all tears from
+their eyes."
+
+This redeemed company is represented as uniting in a song of praise and
+thanksgiving to God for bringing them through their long period of
+trial, "saying Salvation to our God which sitteth upon the throne, and
+unto the Lamb"; while heaven resounds with universal praise as the
+angels and all the redeemed host take up the chorus and swell the mighty
+anthem "saying, Amen; blessing, and glory, and wisdom and thanksgiving,
+and honor, and power, and might be unto our God forever and ever. Amen."
+
+It is clear that, in this chapter and the one preceding, we have two
+grand parallel and comprehensive histories--in one, the process of
+corruption in the so-called church and the final judgments that overtook
+these cruel persecutors of the Lord's people; in the other, the setting
+apart and sealing of God's servants, their preservation from the
+contaminations of an apostate church, and the final glorious triumph of
+all who endure unto the end.
+
+This vision has often been applied in a figurative manner to the
+spiritual reign of God's people on earth before the end of time--that
+they are overcomers through the blood of Christ, that God dwells with
+them in his church, that their spiritual needs are all supplied so they
+hunger and thirst no more--but a careful study of the plan of the
+prophecy will show that its real signification is the heavenly state at
+the end. As the sixth seal describes the final overthrow of all the
+antichristian powers that have oppressed God's people on earth; so this
+vision describes the great white-robed company gathered out of every
+nation, kindred, tongue, and people, who have been preserved faithful
+through all these trials and tribulations, and who receive at last the
+crown of everlasting life. This last vision will be more fully described
+under certain symbols contained in the last two chapters of this book;
+while the earthquake, the falling of the stars, etc., of the sixth seal
+will be more perfectly detailed in chapters 15 and 16.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+ And when he had opened the seventh seal, there was silence in
+ heaven about the space of half an hour.
+
+ 2. And I saw the seven angels which stood before God; and to
+ them were given seven trumpets.
+
+ 3. And another angel came and stood at the altar, having a
+ golden censer; and there was given unto him much incense, that
+ he should offer it with the prayers of all saints upon the
+ golden altar which was before the throne.
+
+ 4. And the smoke of the incense, which came with the prayers of
+ the saints, ascended up before God out of the angel's hand.
+
+ 5. And the angel took the censer, and filled it with fire of the
+ altar, and cast it into the earth: and there were voices, and
+ thunderings, and lightnings, and an earthquake.
+
+The remainder of the book is embraced in the contents of the seventh
+seal. This may appear a little singular at first, being so much larger
+than the preceding ones. But it is easily understood when we consider
+the six as being a synopsis of the whole book, containing a history of
+the church apostate to the final consummation, and also the
+contemporaneous history of the truth church of God; while the seventh
+gives in detail the account of these great persecuting powers, civil and
+ecclesiastical, and the trials and triumphs of the saints in the New
+Jerusalem--developing more fully the events described under the six.
+
+Upon the opening of the seventh seal, "there was silence in heaven about
+the space of half an hour." Whether this interval of silence is intended
+to be symbolical of any event on earth I do not know; neither have I
+seen any solution of the matter that is consistent or satisfactory. Some
+have supposed that it denoted a cessation of persecution among the
+Christians of earth. But if that were the case, then its opposite,
+"voices in heaven," would indicate seasons of persecution. There were
+several seasons of rest from persecution enjoyed by the early saints,
+and why should one period be singled out more than the rest and be thus
+described? Besides, "a half hour," according to prophetic time would
+signify only about one week, a period too short certainly to take
+account of. Others have supposed that it signified the end of the world,
+and that heaven would then be deserted for a short time while the
+judgment was taking place. But the events following show that the end of
+the world is not here described, therefore it can not have reference to
+such. Moreover, it is extremely doubtful whether silence in heaven would
+be a proper symbol of such an event. I do not perceive the analogy. In
+fact, such an interpretation of _silence_ would be literal and not
+symbolic.
+
+Its explanation would seem to be found in connection with certain facts
+stated respecting the opening of the preceding seals--that voices
+followed them. When the first four seals were opened, John heard the
+voices of the four beasts, "as it were a voice of thunder"; and on the
+opening of the fifth, he heard the souls of the martyrs crying unto God;
+but when the seventh was opened, there was silence for a time. The
+contrast is noticeable; but whether it has any special signification, I
+am unable to say; perhaps not.
+
+Before the sounding of the seven trumpets, the acceptableness of the
+prayers of the saints is represented by an angel offering incense "upon
+the golden altar which was before the throne." This scene was doubtless
+introduced to lend encouragement to God's children--that, although
+iniquity abounded on every side and the judgments of God were poured out
+upon the people, still the prayers of the faithful few were acceptable
+in his sight, ascending before the throne like sweet incense from off
+the golden altar.
+
+After offering up the incense with the prayers of all saints, the same
+angel took his censer and filled it with fire from off the altar and
+cast it (the fire) upon the earth--a token of God's avenging
+judgments--"and there were voices, and thunderings, and lightnings, and
+an earthquake." These, of course, were on earth, and symbolized the
+revolutions and convulsions now about to take place in the empire.
+
+ 6. And the seven angels which had the seven trumpets prepared
+ themselves to sound.
+
+ 7. The first angel sounded, and there followed hail and fire
+ mingled with blood, and they were cast upon the earth: and the
+ third part of trees was burnt up, and all green grass was burnt
+ up.
+
+We here enter upon a series of prophecies developing fully the
+successive steps in the decline of the Western Roman empire, by which it
+finally tottered to its fall. It was necessary that this persecuting,
+tyrannical government should be subverted in order to give opportunity
+for the establishment of apostate Christianity in the form of the
+Papacy, as it constituted the "let" or hindrance to the full development
+of the "man of sin" mentioned by the apostle in 2 Thes. 2. That
+persecuting, Pagan Rome was a serious obstacle confronting the
+development of apostasy was recognized even by the early Christians.
+Thus, Tertullian, in his notable Apology, chapter 32, says: "Christians
+are under a particular necessity of praying for the emperors, and for
+the continued state of the empire; because we know that dreadful power
+which hangs over the world, and _the conclusion of the age, which
+threatens the most horrible evils, is restrained by the continuance of
+the time appointed for the Roman empire_. This is what we would not
+experience; and while we pray that it may be deferred, we hereby show
+our good-will to the perpetuity of the Roman state." In a subsequent
+chapter it will be seen that Pagan Rome, broken up into minor divisions
+and no longer able to maintain her position in the political world,
+resigns her power and authority into the hands of the rising Papacy.
+Therefore it is not surprising that the means by which this great change
+is effected should be made the subject of prophetic revelation. Besides,
+we have other things to guide us in the interpretation. We can readily
+identify the symbols under the fifth trumpet with the curse of
+Mohammedanism in the Eastern empire, and we would naturally suppose that
+the first four precede those. Again, the symbols are all drawn from the
+natural world, which leads us assuredly into the political affairs of
+the empire for their fulfilment. They are also of the most destructive
+nature, therefore we look for objects of a corresponding desolating
+character. Finally, the vision of the preceding chapter represents
+fierce, destructive winds as about to descend upon the earth, being
+temporarily held in check to give opportunity for the primitive
+establishment of Christianity, implying that they would afterwards be
+let loose to burst like a tornado upon the empire. It is said positively
+that power was given "to hurt the earth and the sea" (chap. 7:2), and in
+the vision before us the effects produced upon the earth and the trees
+are particularly detailed.
+
+"The earth" signifies the Roman empire, or that portion of the earth
+made the subject of apocalyptic vision. That this application of the
+word _earth_ is correct, is shown by various Scriptures. "And it came to
+pass in those days, that there went out a decree from Caesar Augustus
+that _all the world_ should be taxed." Luke 2:1. "The queen of the South
+... came from the _uttermost parts of the earth_ [southern Arabia] to
+hear the wisdom of Solomon." Mat. 12:42. "Ye shall be witnesses ... unto
+the _uttermost part of the earth_." Acts 1:8. The apostles carried the
+gospel personally, only throughout the territory of the then-known
+civilized world--the Roman empire. Upon this earth there descended in
+the vision before us a fierce storm of hail and fire, mingled with
+blood. Its being mingled with blood would indicate its destructive
+effects. One characteristic of this symbol particularly is worthy of
+notice. Hail and fire cast upon the earth would become absorbed speedily
+or pass into new combinations with the surrounding elements, thus not
+remaining in any permanent form except in its effects. In this
+particular it is wholly unlike the symbol of the next trumpet, which is
+that of a burning mountain cast into the sea, for such a body would
+naturally remain permanently where it fell; whereas a storm of hail and
+fire would soon disappear. Also, the statement that this storm was cast
+upon the earth would indicate that it was a calamity descending from
+without upon the empire.
+
+Where, now, do we find the object that fully meets the requirements of
+this symbol--destructive agents descending upon the Roman empire like a
+furious storm of hail and fire, accomplishing the first important step
+toward the subverting of the empire? We find it in the irruption of the
+fierce Gothic tribes of the North, who, under Alaric, burst like a
+tornado upon the empire about the beginning of the fifth century,
+spreading destruction and desolation upon every side.
+
+The following quotations and facts from the highest authority on the
+subject, Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (Vol. III, pp.
+190-294), will give the reader an idea of the awful effects produced by
+the invasions of these barbarous tribes. The great Theodosius, emperor
+of the Western Roman empire, "had supported the frail and mouldering
+edifice of the republic," but upon his death he was succeeded by the
+weak Honorious. In a few months the Gothic barbarians were in arms. "The
+barriers of the Danube were thrown down, the savage warriors of Scythia
+issued from their forests ... and the various tribes of barbarians, who
+glory in the Gothic name, were irregularly spread over the woody shores
+of Dalmatia to the walls of Constantinople." They were "directed by the
+bold and artful genius of Alaric," who soon concluded that the conquest
+of Constantinople was an impracticable enterprise. He "disdained to
+trample any longer on the prostrate and ruined countries of Thrace and
+Dacia, and he resolved to seek a plentiful harvest of fame and riches in
+a province which had hitherto escaped the ravages of war.... The troops
+which had been posted to defend the straits of Thermopylae retired ...
+without attempting to disturb the secure and rapid passage of Alaric;
+and the fertile fields of Phocis and Baeotia were instantly covered by a
+deluge of barbarians, who massacred the males of an age to bear arms,
+and drove away the beautiful females, with the spoil and cattle of the
+flaming villages. The travelers who visited Greece several years
+afterwards, could easily discover the deep and bloody traces of the
+march of the Goths.... The whole territory of Attica, from the
+promontory of Sunium to the town of Megara, was blasted by his baleful
+presence; and, if we may use the comparison of a contemporary
+philosopher, Athens itself resembled the bleeding and empty skin of a
+slaughtered victim.... Corinth, Argos, Sparta, yielded without
+resistance to the arms of the Goths; and the most fortunate of the
+inhabitants were saved, by death, from beholding the slavery of their
+families and the conflagration of their cities."
+
+Arcadius, the emperor of the East, wishing to dissuade Alaric from
+further conquests and such wholesale massacres, promoted him to the rank
+of Master-general of the eastern Illyricum, but it had an opposite
+effect. "The birth of Alaric, the glory of his past exploits, and the
+confidence in his future designs, insensibly united the body of the
+[Gothic] nation under his victorious standard; and, with the unanimous
+consent of the barbarian chieftains, the Master-general of Illyricum was
+elevated, according to the ancient custom, on a shield, and solemnly
+proclaimed king of the Visigoths. Armed with this double power, situated
+on the verge of the two empires, he alternately sold his deceitful
+promises to the courts of Arcadius and Honorious; until he declared and
+executed his resolution of _invading the dominions of the West_.... He
+was tempted by the fame, the beauty, the wealth of Italy, which he had
+twice visited; and he secretly aspired to plant the Gothic standard on
+the walls of Rome, and to enrich his army with the accumulated spoils of
+three hundred triumphs." He marched into Italy, and the emperor fled
+before him. A temporary respite was finally procured by the promise of a
+payment of four thousand pounds of gold.
+
+Alaric soon appeared, however, before the very walls of Rome, and that
+splendid city, surrounded by hordes of barbarians, was soon reduced to a
+wretched condition by famine. Two representatives of the Romans waited
+upon Alaric for terms of peace, stating that if such could not be
+arranged the inhabitants of the city, animated by despair, would fight
+to the bitter end. To this the haughty conqueror made this famous reply:
+"The thicker the grass, the easier it is mowed." With an insulting
+laugh, he named the ransom required--all the gold and silver contained
+in the city, all the rich and precious movables, together with all the
+slaves. Then the ministers humbly asked, "What do you intend to leave
+us?" "Your lives," the haughty king replied, and retired. He finally
+relaxed a little and fixed other terms, which included the immediate
+payment of the enormous sum of five thousand pounds of gold, thirty
+thousand pounds of silver, besides other treasure. "The victorious
+leader, who united the daring spirit of a barbarian with the art and
+discipline of a Roman general, was at the head of a hundred thousand
+fighting men; and Italy pronounced, with terror and respect, the
+formidable name of Alaric."
+
+A second time Rome was besieged by Alaric and taken. Honorious was
+deposed and Attalus made emperor; but Honorious was afterwards restored.
+In A.D. 410 he again marched upon the city, captured and entered it.
+"Eleven hundred and sixty-three years after the foundation of Rome, the
+imperial city, which had subdued and civilized so considerable a part of
+mankind, was delivered to the licentious fury of the tribes of Germania
+and Scythia." For six days the city was sacked by the barbarous
+soldiery, and the horrible scenes of robbery, murder, and rapine that
+ensued can not be described. It has been said that "civilized warfare is
+sufficiently terrible," but that would be almost a blessing compared
+with such scenes as these. For a space of four years Alaric ravaged
+Italy almost without opposition.
+
+The slaughter and devastation that followed this storm of "hail and
+fire" is thus described: "The banks of the Rhine were crowned like those
+of the Tiber, with houses and well-cultivated farms; and if a poet
+descended the river, he might express his doubts on which side was
+situated the territory of the Romans. This scene of peace and plenty was
+suddenly changed into a desert, and the prospect of the smoking ruins
+could alone distinguish the solitude of nature from the desolation of
+man. The flourishing city of Mentz was surprised and destroyed, and many
+thousand Christians inhumanly massacred in the church. Wurms perished
+after a long and obstinate siege. Strasburg, Spires, Rheims, Tournay,
+Arras, Amiens, experienced the cruel oppression of the German yoke, and
+the consuming flames of war spread from the banks of the Rhine over the
+greatest part of the seventeen provinces of Gaul. That rich and
+extensive country, as far as the ocean, the Alps and the Pyrenees, was
+delivered to the barbarians, who drove before them, in a promiscuous
+crowd, the bishop, the senator and the virgin, laden with the spoils of
+their houses and altars."
+
+Another historian describing the same, a few years after the event,
+says: "The barbarians meeting with little resistance, indulged in the
+utmost cruelty. The cities which they captured, they so utterly
+destroyed that no traces of them now remain, except in Thrace and
+Greece, except here and there a tower or a gate. All the men who opposed
+them they slew, young and old, and indeed spared not women, nor even
+children. Whence there is still but a sparse population in Italy. The
+plunder which they seized in every part of Europe was immense, and
+especially at Rome, where they left nothing, either public or private."
+In this latter description reference is also made to some later
+invasions, but they were all of the same desolating character.
+
+These historical facts show how the green grass, or the feebler portion
+of society--the tender sex, the young, and the aged--were consumed
+before this fearful storm of hail and fire; and also how the trees, or
+the stronger portion--those better able to make resistance--suffered
+greatly.
+
+It is also a fact to be observed that these fierce tribes which overran
+Italy, harassed or captured Rome repeatedly, and threatened the
+overthrow of the empire, made no permanent settlement in that territory.
+"Under Alaric the Goths make no lasting settlement. In the long tale of
+intrigue and warfare between the Goths and the two Imperial courts which
+fills up this whole time, cessions of territory are offered to the
+Goths, provinces are occupied by them, but as yet they do not take root
+anywhere; no Western land as yet becomes Gothia,"--Encyclopaedia
+Britannica, Art. Goths. After the death of Alaric (A.D. 412), however,
+they settled in the southern part of Spain and Gaul[5]--part of the
+territory of the West--but they no longer threatened the life of the
+empire; but, on the contrary, they became allies of the Romans in
+opposing the dreadful incursions of the Huns and other barbarians. Thus
+their invasion of the West was at first terribly destructive--like a
+storm of hail and fire--but their ravages soon ceased, except in their
+disastrous and weakening effects.
+
+[Footnote 5: This division of the Gothic tribes is commonly called the
+Visigoths (Western Goths), as distinguished from the Ostrogoths, or
+Eastern Goths.]
+
+ 8. And the second angel sounded, and as it were a great mountain
+ burning with fire was cast into the sea: and the third part of
+ the sea became blood;
+
+ 9. And the third part of the creatures which were in the sea,
+ and had life, died; and the third part of the ships were
+ destroyed.
+
+The symbol of this trumpet is that of a volcanic mountain cast into the
+sea, whence it sends forth its streams of lava in every direction until
+a third of the creatures in the sea are destroyed, thus spreading
+desolation on every side. It would naturally remain where it fell, a
+permanent instrument of destruction.
+
+We have here a description of the next step of importance in the
+downfall of the Western empire. The second great invasion was that of
+"the terrible Genseric" with his Vandal hordes, who pushed southward
+through Gaul and Spain, conquered the Carthaginian territory of northern
+Africa, and there formed a permanent independent government in A.D. 439.
+From this fixed place, he continued for years to make incursions upon
+the bordering cities and islands, burning the cities, murdering the
+inhabitants, and intercepting the commerce of the Mediterranean. During
+his military career, 429-468, he became the terror of the inhabitants of
+the empire, insomuch that historians designate him "the terrible
+Genseric." The depredations committed by his followers were but a
+repetition of such scenes of barbarity as have already been described in
+the invasions of Alaric under the first trumpet, therefore I will not
+devote much space to the historical facts in the case. Their deeds,
+however, were such that the very term _Vandal_ has come to be used as a
+designation of any man of ferocious character. Concerning the important
+part that this chieftain acted in the downfall of the Western empire,
+Gibbon uses this significant language: "Genseric, a name which, in the
+destruction of the Roman empire, has deserved an equal rank with the
+names of Alaric and Attila." Vol. III, p. 370.
+
+In the year 454 the empress Eudoxia wished to be revenged on Maximus,
+who had murdered her husband Valentinian and had grasped the throne, and
+she secretly invited Genseric to attack Rome. That fierce general, who
+is described by the Encyclopaedia Britannica as "cruel to
+blood-thirstiness, cunning, unscrupulous, and grasping," was glad to
+undertake the task, and he soon landed an army of Vandals and African
+Moors at the gates of the city. It was soon taken and for fifteen days
+given over to be sacked by the barbarous soldiery. When they had glutted
+their savage instincts with the horrible deeds of murder and rapine,
+loaded with the spoils of the imperial city, they returned to Africa,
+taking with them an immense number of captives, including Eudoxia and
+her two daughters. This desolating incursion left the empire weak and
+tottering to its fall. Genseric "became the tyrant of the sea; the
+coasts of Italy, Greece, and Asia, were again exposed to his revenge and
+avarice. Tripoli and Sardinia returned to his obedience; he added Sicily
+to the number of his provinces; and before he died, in the fulness of
+years and glory, he beheld the FINAL EXTINCTION of the empire of the
+West." Gibbon, Vol. III, pp. 497, 498.
+
+By "the sea" into which this burning mountain was cast is meant, not the
+Mediterranean nor any other literal sea, but the heart of the empire,
+and that in a state of agitation. The empire was in a state of
+comparative quiet when Alaric appeared; therefore the storm of hail and
+fire is represented as falling upon "the earth," as a result of which
+society was thrown into a state of great agitation, and moved to its
+depths, like an ocean in a storm. This was its condition when Genseric,
+from his fixed position in Africa, began his desolating incursions;
+therefore the next symbol is that of a mountain cast into "the sea." By
+the sea becoming blood is doubtless meant the destruction of life in the
+empire, and "the third part" denotes the vast extent of the destruction.
+
+I must speak with hesitation on what is signified by "the creatures
+which were in the sea" and the "ships." By analogy I would be led to
+refer the former to the rulers and the dignitaries in the empire, they
+bearing an analagous position to the empire that fishes do to the waters
+of the sea; while the latter may refer to public monuments and
+structures.
+
+ 10. And the third angel sounded, and there fell a great star
+ from heaven, burning as it were a lamp, and it fell upon the
+ third part of the rivers, and upon the fountains of waters;
+
+ 11. And the name of the star is called Wormwood: and the third
+ part of the waters became wormwood; and many men died of the
+ waters, because they were made bitter.
+
+The description given of this star is similar to that of a large burning
+meteor, such as we frequently see shooting athwart the heavens. It fell
+rapidly to earth, as such meteors often do, and struck the
+fountain-heads of the rivers, imparting to them such a poisonous quality
+as caused the death of those who drank the waters.
+
+This symbol is also drawn from the natural world, and hence we must look
+for its fulfilment in political events. The rapidity of its fall and
+disappearance in the waters would direct us to an agent who would appear
+suddenly and soon disappear, and whose career would leave bitter
+results. The direct effects of this meteor were experienced by the
+rivers and the fountains of waters, which bear an analagous relation to
+the sea that bordering tribes and nations do to an empire. The heart of
+the empire, or "the sea," was directly affected by the burning mountain,
+under the preceding trumpet; while the tributaries of the sea, or the
+bordering tribes, are made the subject of direct attack under this
+symbol and the poisonous qualities of their waters carried to far
+distant points.
+
+Under this striking symbol we have a description of the third important
+step in the downward course of Rome--the short but eventful career of
+Attila, with his terrible Scythians, or Huns. Singularly, Attila was
+said to "possess the iron sword of the war-god _Mars_," and he claimed
+for himself the designation or title "The Scourge of God"; while his
+followers were even more cruel and barbarous, if possible, than the
+Goths and the Vandals.
+
+Coming from the remote solitudes of Asia under the leadership of their
+fierce king, they poured like a tornado, first upon the inhabitants of
+the Eastern empire (in 442, 445) and then turned their attention
+westward. Attila ruled over "nearly all the tribes north of the Danube
+and the Black sea," and under his banner fought Ostrogoths, Gepidae,
+Alani, Heruli, and many other Teutonic peoples. Says Gibbon: "The whole
+breadth of Europe, as it extends above five hundred miles from the
+Euxine to the Adriatic, was at once invaded, and occupied, and desolated
+by the myriads of barbarians whom Attila led into the field." It was the
+boast of Attila that the grass never grew on the spot which his horse
+had trod. In 451 he led his forces, seven hundred thousand strong,
+through the center of Germany into the heart of Gaul, where he was met
+at Chalons by the combined forces of the Visigoths, Alans, Franks and
+Romans, and was defeated, with the loss of one hundred and seventy
+thousand of his men. This was one of the most gigantic as well as one of
+the most important battles of history. A rivulet flowing through the
+field of battle is said to have been colored and swollen by the blood of
+the slain. The next year, however, with a greater force at his command,
+he fell with headlong fury upon northern Italy; but he did not attack
+Rome. Suddenly and seemingly without cause, he withdrew his army; and
+this peculiar action of his has been the wonder of historians ever
+since. Says the Encyclopaedia Britannica: "Attila at once withdrew from
+Italy, but the motive which led him to act thus is not known." According
+to the prophecy, he was to fall upon the "rivers and fountains of
+waters" only. A short time later, in 453, he died, and "the vast empire
+over which he had ruled broke up _immediately_ after his death, no one
+chief being powerful enough to seize the supremacy." Thus his short but
+wonderful career of about twelve years ended suddenly, like a meteor
+falling into a river.
+
+But the effects of this invasion were farreaching. Rome in her declining
+strength, being unable to cope with these immense hordes of barbarians,
+was forced to call to her assistance the half-civilized tribes of Gothic
+barbarians against a more dreaded foe. The success that attended these
+conflicts of the combined forces were the means of giving greater
+political importance to these Gothic tribes and securing their
+independence. But while they rose, Rome fell. By the very act of
+employing such weapons in defense, Rome robbed herself of the little
+political strength remaining, and she was obliged to accept the bitter
+consequences.
+
+Under each of these first three trumpets the extent of destruction is
+indicated by the expression "the third part." Since the successive steps
+in the downfall of the empire is the subject under consideration, this
+expression as here applied doubtless has particular reference to the
+loss of political power and life, rather than referring directly to the
+loss of human life sustained. With this thought in view, it is evident
+that the political importance of the empire was entirely destroyed by
+these desolating incursions. Of the truth of this fact all historians
+agree. Nothing of Rome remained, except the semblance of a government,
+when the time arrived for the sounding of the next trumpet.
+
+ 12. And the fourth angel sounded, and the third part of the sun
+ was smitten, and the third part of the moon, and the third part
+ of the stars; so as the third part of them was darkened, and the
+ day shone not for a third part of it, and the night likewise.
+
+The symbol of this trumpet is that of an eclipse of sun, moon, and
+stars, so that they shone not for a third part of the day and night.
+Under the sixth seal we showed that these luminaries of heaven are taken
+as symbols of rulers and princes; for the latter bear an analagous
+relation to the empire that the former do to the earth. In the
+darkening, then, of the sun, moon, and stars, we are to look for some
+disastrous change or overthrow in the imperial government. Such an event
+occurred only a few years after the events described under the preceding
+trumpets. With her political strength and resources exhausted, Rome
+could no longer maintain a separate existence, and Odoacer, king of the
+Heruli, overthrew Momyllus Augustulus, the last of the Roman line of
+emperors, and caused himself to be proclaimed king of Italy in A.D. 476.
+This terminated the Western empire; and thus was the Roman sun eclipsed
+in darkness. In a subsequent chapter, however, we will find the eclipse
+lifted at a later period and _New Rome_ enjoying all the power and
+authority lost in her predecessors of the old Augustin line.
+
+Odoacer continued in possession of his kingdom seventeen years. Then he
+was defeated and slain by Theodoric, and by him the kingdom of the
+Ostrogoths was established in Italy. Sixty years later this kingdom was
+subverted by Belisarius, the general of Justinian, emperor of the East,
+to whom it became a tributary province. In each of the principal cities
+of Italy Justinian appointed a governor with the title of Duke, in
+subordination to another with the title of Exarch, whose residence was
+at Ravenna. "Thus, at last, was Rome, once the proud mistress of the
+world, reduced to a poor dukedom, made tributary to the Exarch of
+Ravenna, and he holding his authority at the will of the emperor of
+Constantinople, the seat of the Eastern empire."
+
+Thus, under the symbols of these four trumpets we have developed the
+wondrous history of the downfall of imperial Rome, in order to give
+opportunity for the scenes of the drama yet to follow. The "man of sin"
+could not be fully revealed in all his terrible features until this
+hindrance was removed out of the way. Imperial Rome for three centuries
+stood as the great opposer of God's people and slaughtered thousands,
+perhaps millions, of the Lord's innocent servants, and the hand of
+retributive Justice was finally extended to humble her to the dust.
+Singularly, the persons whom God made choice of to effect her downfall
+have either regarded themselves as special instruments whose mission it
+was to punish the world or else have received such designations by
+historians because of their awful work. Contemporary historians
+distinguish Alaric by the epithets "The Scourge of God," "The Destroyer
+of Nations"; while the great Vandal leader is designated "The Terrible
+Genseric." Attila claimed the title "The Scourge of God."
+
+ 13. And I beheld, and heard an angel flying through the midst of
+ heaven, saying with a loud voice, Woe, woe, woe, to the
+ inhabiters of the earth by reason of the other voices of the
+ trumpet of the three angels, which are yet to sound!
+
+The later editions of the Greek New Testament give the word _eagle_
+instead of _angel_--denoting a messenger or angel flying with the
+swiftness of an eagle. This messenger doubtless is not intended to be
+symbolic; for it is not one of the seven angels, but a messenger
+possessing a warning, and that warning is given "to the inhabitants of
+the earth," as if they were addressed directly. It simply announces that
+the three trumpets yet to sound will possess greater calamities to the
+people of earth than those that have preceded, by reason of which they
+are called woes. The manner, also, in which the woe trumpets are spoken
+of afterwards confirm the statement that the announcement is literal and
+not symbolical. "One woe is past, and, behold, there come two more woes
+hereafter." Chap. 9:12. "The second woe it past: and, behold, the third
+woe cometh quickly." Chap. 11:14. These announcements are evidently
+literal, and serve to explain the passage before us. Accordingly, the
+last three trumpets are generally referred to as the woe trumpets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+ And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven
+ unto the earth: and to him was given the key of the bottomless
+ pit.
+
+ 2. And he opened the bottomless pit; and there arose a smoke out
+ of the pit, as the smoke of a great furnace; and the sun and the
+ air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the pit.
+
+ 3. And there came out of the smoke locusts upon the earth: and
+ unto them was given power, as the scorpions of the earth have
+ power.
+
+ 4. And it was commanded them that they should not hurt the grass
+ of the earth, neither any green thing, neither any tree; but
+ only those men which have not the seal of God in their
+ foreheads.
+
+ 5. And to them it was given that they should not kill them, but
+ that they should be tormented five months: and their torment was
+ as the torment of a scorpion, when he striketh a man.
+
+ 6. And in those days shall men seek death, and shall not find
+ it; and shall desire to die, and death shall flee from them.
+
+ 7. And the shapes of the locusts were like unto horses prepared
+ unto battle; and on their heads were as it were crowns like
+ gold, and their faces were as the faces of men.
+
+ 8. And they had hair as the hair of women, and their teeth were
+ as the teeth of lions.
+
+ 9. And they had breastplates, as it were breastplates of iron;
+ and the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of
+ many horses running to battle.
+
+ 10. And they had tails like unto scorpions, and there were
+ stings in their tails: and their power was to hurt men five
+ months.
+
+ 11. And they had a king over them, which is the angel of the
+ bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but
+ in the Greek tongue hath his name Apollyon.
+
+The symbols of this trumpet are of a very peculiar character and
+peculiarly combined. They are not drawn entirely from the natural world,
+showing that we are not to look for their fulfilment in political events
+alone; neither are they drawn from human life in any such way as to
+indicate events in the religious history of the church. The leading
+characters in it, however, are living, active agents of such a
+destructive nature as to entitle them to the designation of a woe.
+
+The first object presented in the vision is a "star" fallen to the
+earth. Our translation conveys the idea that this star was in the act of
+falling; but in the original it is different, being there represented as
+having fallen, its dejection from heaven to earth being complete. The
+only place that it appeared in view was on the earth, and there it is
+described as fallen. A star is a symbol either of a civil ruler or of a
+religious teacher, the symbols in connection deciding whether it is set
+in the political or the ecclesiastical firmament. But this was not such
+a star as He who walketh in the midst of the golden candle-sticks
+holdeth in his right hand, but it was a _fallen_ star, indicating that
+it was the propagator of a false faith.
+
+To this star was given a key. In the Gospels the same figure is
+employed, where the ministers of Christ are represented as possessing
+the keys of the kingdom of heaven, showing that they acted in his name
+and by his authority. How appropriate, then, is this symbol as applied
+to a false teacher, who possesses, not the keys of the kingdom of
+heaven, but, instead, "the key of the bottomless pit"! Thus, under the
+symbol of the star and the key, we have the teacher and his authority
+set forth. Armed with this authority, this false teacher "opened the
+bottomless pit; and there rose a smoke out of the pit, as the smoke of a
+great furnace; and the sun and air were darkened by reason of the smoke
+of the pit." In the Scriptures Jesus is represented as the Sun of
+righteousness, while "the light of the _glorious gospel_ of Christ"
+illuminates the world. But here we have something of the opposite
+character--a dense smoke eclipsing the sun and darkening the heavens.
+Have we not here a fit representation of a delusive faith proceeding
+from its true source, "the bottomless pit"? And is not a fallen star an
+appropriate symbol of its propagator?
+
+In representing a system of religion by these objects from nature we
+depart from the general rule first laid down--that objects of nature
+symbolize political affairs, while the department of human and angelic
+life is chosen to represent religious affairs. But the reader should
+bear in mind one important exception to this rule--that things
+prominently connected with the history of the people of God in former
+ages are frequently employed (regardless of the department to which they
+belong) to represent spiritual things, their interpretation being easily
+seen; such as candle-sticks, altar, temple, incense, etc. When the
+plague of "thick darkness" covered the land of Egypt for three days,
+"the children of Israel had light in their dwellings." In the exodus the
+Lord went before them "by night in a pillar of fire, to give them
+light." After the erection of the tabernacle the holy place was
+constantly illuminated. This natural light in the Jewish age constitutes
+a beautiful type of the spiritual "light of the glorious gospel of
+Christ" that has "shined in our hearts" in the Christian dispensation.
+This spiritual light comes from Christ, the "Sun of righteousness," the
+"true Light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world"; and
+proceeds, also, from his people, who "shine as lights in the world." But
+it is the "light of the _gospel_." This light proceeds in a special
+sense from God's ministers, who are represented as "stars" (chap. 1:20)
+and who possess "the keys of the kingdom of heaven." Mat. 16:19; 18:18.
+How appropriate, then, that a _fallen_ "star," possessing "the key of
+the bottomless pit," should be a symbol of a religious impostor, and
+that the smoke which darkened the heavens, eclipsing the sun, the source
+of light, should represent a prominent delusive faith! I have already
+mentioned the fact that the symbols of this vision lead to a series of
+events entirely separate in their nature from the spiritual history of
+the church as developed under other symbols. We find its fulfilment in
+Mohammed and the delusive system he promulgated. In the year 606 Mahomet
+retired to a cave in Hera, near Mecca, and there received his pretended
+revelations, although it was not until six years later that he began to
+teach his doctrines publicly and to gain followers outside of the circle
+of his own family and personal friends. Gibbon, Vol. V., p. 121.
+
+The next object in the vision is the locusts that came out of the smoke,
+to which was given power like scorpions, or power to inflict a deadly
+sting like scorpions. To what living agents, then, did the delusion of
+Mohammedanism give birth--agents of a destructive nature like scorpion
+locust? Evidently, the Saracens,[6] those warrior followers of Mohammed
+who flocked to his standard. These locusts received the express command
+that "they should not hurt the grass of the earth, neither any green
+thing, neither any tree; but only those men which have not the seal of
+God in their foreheads." The successor of Mohammed, Abubeker, gave the
+Saracens a command that they should "destroy no palm-trees, nor burn any
+fields of grain; cut down no fruit-trees, nor do any mischief to cattle,
+only such as you kill to eat." This command was singular, yet it
+doubtless is not the fulfilment of the command to the locusts; for that
+would be adopting a literal meaning instead of a symbolic one, and to
+complete the picture we should have had literal Saracens instead of
+locusts. We can not consistently make a part literal and the remainder
+symbolical. In the explanation of the first trumpet (chap. 8:6, 7), we
+showed that grass and trees symbolized the inhabitants of a kingdom,
+grass representing the feebler and trees the stronger portions of
+society. The fact, then, that these locusts were not to destroy the
+green grass and trees show that they were not sent as a scourge upon the
+political empire only, as was the storm of hail and fire under the first
+trumpet. Had their mission been like that of natural locusts, to destroy
+every green thing, we should then conclude that they were sent as a
+scourge upon the empire alone, having nothing whatever to do with a
+system of religion. These locusts, however, were commanded not to do
+what natural locusts always do--eat green grass and trees--and were
+commissioned to do what locusts never do--"hurt men," but only those who
+have not the seal of God in their foreheads; that is, the worshipers of
+a false, idolatrous church, who are not known unto God as his true
+people. This is positive proof that the design of this vision is to set
+forth some awful religious imposture; for the "men" that they were to
+hurt are found in the department which by analogy represents religious
+events.
+
+[Footnote 6: "In earlier times the name of Saraceni was applied by
+Greeks and Romans to the troublesome Nomad Arabs of the Syro-Arabian
+desert."--_Encyclopaedia Britannica_. In the Middle Ages, however,
+Europeans began to call all their Moslem enemies Saracens. It is in the
+limited sense that it is here applied, designating the first followers
+of Mohammed before the rise of the Ottoman empire.]
+
+The fact that their commission was to torment those "men which have not
+the seal of God in their foreheads," is a proof also of the wide-spread
+apostasies that had already taken place. This was the time when the pale
+horseman was careering over the world carrying desolation everywhere by
+his instruments of oppression--sword, pestilences, famine, and the wild
+beasts of the earth. "The churches both in the Western and Eastern
+empire were in the most deplorable condition, being corrupted with the
+grossest ignorance and idolatry; the virgin Mary, the saints, and
+miserable relics of every description being worshiped in the place of
+Jehovah, and superstition reigning with sovereign power over all minds."
+The Saracen warriors of Mohammed were sent as a scourge upon apostate
+Christendom, overrunning the very territory where the gospel was first
+preached, and were commissioned to "torment" the false professors of
+Christianity.
+
+In regard to the kind and the extent of the injury they were to inflict,
+it is said that "to them it was given that they should not kill them,
+but that they should be tormented five months: and their torment was as
+the torment of a scorpion, when he striketh a man. And in those days
+shall men seek death, and shall not find it; and shall desire to die,
+and death shall flee from them." The Saracens, as here described under
+the symbol of the locusts, sustained a two-fold relation, and the
+careful and perfect manner in which the symbols are selected to set it
+forth is worthy of particular notice. In the first place, the Saracens
+were a political body. As such, locusts would fitly represent them. But
+they were also a religious body, and how could that fact be symbolically
+combined with the other? It is done by the locusts' being forbidden to
+act out their own nature in eating grass and trees, and their being
+commanded instead to "hurt men," thus changing the field of their
+operations into the department of human life--the department that is
+chosen to symbolically set forth religious events. Thus the
+politico-religious system of the Saracens is accurately set forth. This,
+also, is nearly as clear as a demonstration that the position already
+taken concerning the nature and the use of symbolic language is correct.
+
+It was given that they should "not kill" men. We have already shown that
+killing men when used symbolically signifies the destruction of the
+political or ecclesiastical organizations and institutions of society.
+We could not consistently interpret it as literal slaughter, but as some
+analagous destruction. Now, the Saracen power was, as already stated, a
+politico-religious system, and its warriors were an infatuated set of
+religious fanatics, described by historians as "carrying the sword in
+one hand, and the Koran in the other." Thus, they had it in their power
+to kill either religiously or politically--destroy either the church or
+the empire--but they did neither, for their mission was not to kill, but
+to "torment." "They made extensive conquests and gained immense numbers
+of converts. But they did not overthrow the Eastern empire, although
+they repeatedly attacked and besieged Constantinople, suffering,
+however, uniform defeat in the attempt. Neither did they destroy the
+church, corrupt and apostate as it was. To idolators and infidels they
+put the alternative of the Koran or death; but allowed the Christians to
+retain their church organization, laying them, however, under severe
+contributions, and treating them to the ignominious appellation of
+Christian dogs." Concerning the character of Mohammed, Gibbon informs us
+that "he seldom trampled on a prostrate enemy, and he seems to promise,
+that on the payment of a tribute, the least guilty of his unbelieving
+subjects might be indulged in their worship, or at least in their
+imperfect faith" (Vol. V, p. 129), and this, of course, would be the
+natural tendency of his followers. The Armenian and the Greek churches
+survived, and still exist in that portion of the world, but they have
+indeed been greviously tormented. "The proud Moslem, glorying in his
+prophet and religion, has heaped every possible insult and injury upon
+the Christians," yet he suffered them to live, but live only for him to
+torment. Surely the oppressions thus experienced are appropriately
+described by the words, "as the torment of a scorpion, when he striketh
+a man." Under such torments the professed Christians might court death,
+but such is not granted; and still they survive, but only to be
+"tormented." The Moslem had "the Christian dog" completely under his
+foot.
+
+We now turn our attention to the period of time during which these
+Saracen locusts were to continue their ravages. It is given as "five
+months," or one hundred and fifty days. As this description is entirely
+symbolic, we must consider the time symbolic also, for time certainly
+can be symbolized as well as anything else. It is very appropriate for
+days to symbolize years, for they are analagous periods of time; the
+diurnal revolution of the earth being taken to represent the earth's
+annual movement. Such a system of reckoning time was known centuries
+ago. When Jacob complained to Laban because he had been given Leah
+instead of Rachel, "Laban said, It must not be so done in our country,
+to give the younger before the first-born. Fulfil her _week_, and we
+will give thee this also for the service which thou shalt serve me yet
+_seven other years_. And Jacob did so, and fulfilled her week ... seven
+other years." Gen. 29:26-30. In this case it will be seen that a day was
+used to represent a year, since seven days, or one week, represented
+seven years. When the law was given, Moses recognized the week of seven
+natural days, the last day of which was constituted a Sabbath of rest
+for Israel; but he also instituted a week of seven years, the last year
+of which was a sabbatical year of rest unto the land. This last fact
+will explain such expressions as "forty days, _each day for a year_"
+(Num. 14:34), and "I have appointed thee each day for a year." Ezek.
+4:6.
+
+This period, then, of "five months," or one hundred and fifty days,
+would represent symbolically one hundred and fifty years. As before
+stated, it was in the year A.D. 612 that Mohammed began to expound his
+doctrines publicly and to gather adherents around his standard, from
+which point the locusts commenced, although the smoke had been let out
+of the pit a little previously. For a period of one hundred and fifty
+years from this date, they continued their ravages, until A.D. 762. Then
+they "built Bagdad, which became their settled seat of empire; and
+henceforth they became a settled nation, making no further conquests."
+From that date their power began to decline. But during this one hundred
+and fifty years they spread over the country like swarms of devouring
+locusts. According to the well-known facts of history, "they overran
+Arabia, Palestine, Persia, Egypt, and the northern shores of Africa,
+from which they passed to the conquest of Portugal and Spain." These
+were the countries that had been the most oppressed by a priest-ridden
+church and where especially were to be found those "men which have not
+the seal of God in their foreheads." Europe was trembling and filled
+with apprehension at what her fate might be at the hands of these
+fanatic warriors who fought with savage fury, under the promise of their
+prophet that, if slain in battle, they should be immediately transported
+to Paradise. At the zenith of their power, and confident of success,
+they passed from Spain into France four hundred thousand strong. But
+here they exceeded their mission. The southern provinces of France
+contained many Christians who had the "seal of God" upon them, and this
+country became the seat of the Waldenses and Albigenses, of which
+interesting people we shall learn more hereafter. The invading host was
+met at Tours by Charles, grandfather of Charlemagne, who dealt them such
+a crushing blow that he was ever afterward designated by the surname
+Martel--the Hammer. This battle was one of the fiercest recorded in
+history. The Saracens who had scarcely ever experienced defeat fought
+with the fury of despair, until, according to the accounts of that age,
+three hundred and seventy-five thousand of their number lay upon the
+field of battle with their general. This decisive victory saved Europe
+from her threatened subjection to the Mohammedan faith.
+
+The next point in the vision to claim our attention is the particular
+description of these locusts. Some of the points mentioned might find a
+literal fulfilment in the personal appearance of the Saracens--such as
+the crowns signifying the turbans they wore, etc., but we must adhere
+strictly to the symbolic mode of interpretation and look for their
+fulfilment in Saracen character. Their being like war-horses denotes
+their warlike disposition. The crowns on their heads signify their great
+success and triumphs. Their faces of men and hair like women doubtless
+signify their boldness on the one hand and their effeminateness on the
+other. Their teeth as the teeth of lions show their ferocity of
+character. Their breastplates of iron indicate their invincibility or
+else their insensibility to injuries inflicted upon them. The sound of
+their wings like horses and chariots running to battle denotes the
+multitude and rapidity of their conquests. Their tails like scorpions,
+containing stings with which to "hurt men"--operating in the religious
+world--symbolize their position as propagators of a false faith. Thus
+they are set forth in their two-fold character--as invincible warriors
+and as the zealous professors of a delusion, whose sting was like that
+of a scorpion when he strikes a man.
+
+"And they had a king over them, which is the angel of the bottomless
+pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in the Greek tongue
+hath his name Apollyon." The following fact of history will explain
+this: "The Saracens had their Caliphs, the successors of Mohammed, who
+united in themselves the supreme civil, military and ecclesiastical
+powers. They were the high-priests of their religion, the commanders of
+their armies, and the emperors of the nation." This king over them
+signifies a succession of rulers, and they are well described as "the
+angel of the bottomless pit," for that is the very place where the
+delusion is said to have originated. Mahomet, as a fallen star, opened
+the pit and let out the smoke, and his successors, who grasped his power
+and authority, are fitly characterized as angels from the same place,
+bearing the name Abaddon or Apollyon, which terms both signify
+Destroyer.
+
+Is not this a wonderful combination of symbols which can be carried out
+with surprising accuracy? What human ingenuity could have ever contrived
+such a marvelous series of events, and described them under such
+appropriate symbols? Finally, let me ask, Where in the whole compass of
+universal history can be found another series of events so perfectly
+meeting every requirement of the symbols? In this we must acknowledge
+the hand of God.
+
+ 12. One woe is past; and, behold, there come two woes more
+ hereafter.
+
+This announcement, that one woe is past, meaning that the period of one
+hundred and fifty years during which the Saracens were to continue their
+conquests has ended, serves an important purpose in enabling us to fix
+the chronology of the events described. It proves that they succeed each
+other.
+
+ 13. And the sixth angel sounded, and I heard a voice from the
+ four horns of the golden altar which is before God,
+
+ 14. Saying to the sixth angel which had the trumpet, Loose the
+ four angels which are bound in the great river Euphrates.
+
+ 15. And the four angels were loosed, which were prepared for an
+ hour, and a day, and a month, and a year, for to slay the third
+ part of men.
+
+ 16. And the number of the army of the horsemen were two hundred
+ thousand thousand: and I heard the number of them.
+
+ 17. And thus I saw the horses in the vision, and them that sat
+ on them, having breastplates of fire, and of jacinth, and
+ brimstone: and the heads of the horses were as the heads of
+ lions; and out of their mouths issued fire and smoke and
+ brimstone.
+
+ 18. By these three was the third part of men killed, by the
+ fire, and by the smoke, and by the brimstone, which issued out
+ of their mouths.
+
+ 19. For their power is in their mouth, and in their tails: for
+ their tails were like unto serpents, and had heads, and with
+ them they do hurt.
+
+ 20. And the rest of the men which were not killed by these
+ plagues yet repented not of the works of their hands, that they
+ should not worship devils, and idols of gold, and silver, and
+ brass, and stone, and of wood: which neither can see, nor hear,
+ nor walk:
+
+ 21. Neither repented they of their murders, nor of their
+ sorceries, nor of their fornication, nor of their thefts.
+
+At the sounding of the sixth trumpet, or the second woe trumpet, a voice
+is heard from the four horns (all the horns) of the golden altar. This
+probably denotes that the very same altar where incense was offered up
+to God with the prayers of all saints was now crying out to him for
+vengeance upon an apostate church. That church had reached the summit of
+apostasy and iniquity, the virgin Mary, the saints, and thousands of
+idols in the form of miserable relics being worshiped more than God.
+Because of these abominable idolatries, a voice is heard crying from the
+golden altar for the avenging judgments of Heaven, which were the
+loosing of the four angels bound in the river Euphrates. The symbols of
+this vision are also of peculiar character and drawn from different
+departments. We have four angels bound in the Euphrates, an immense army
+of horsemen, then a large number of horses with heads as of lions, and
+fire, smoke, and brimstone issuing from their mouths. The horses thus
+particularly described are evidently intended to have a definite
+symbolical signification, and being objects of nature, they would
+indicate a political or military power. The horsemen, being objects from
+human life, would point us to some religious body; while the angels
+signify the leaders that have control of these agencies. Their being
+commissioned "to slay the third part of men" show that they will
+overthrow some of the established institutions of society. We are to
+look, therefore, for some politico-religious power that should invade
+and overthrow the empire. We are, of course, directed to the Eastern
+empire; for the Western division was subverted under the symbols of the
+first four trumpets. With these specifications before us, we shall have
+no difficulty in identifying the power intended--_the Turkish, or
+Ottoman, empire_. Its agreement with the symbolic representations of the
+vision will be manifest from a statement of the facts of history.
+
+"The Turks were of Tartar or Scythian origin, from the northern regions
+of Asia, whence also the Huns hived upon Europe during the fourth and
+fifth centuries. The latter passed to the north of the Black sea from
+Russia, and swept the regions of the Danube and the Rhine. The Turks,
+passing to the east of the same, fell upon the empire from that quarter.
+They took possession of Armenia Major in the ninth century, where they
+increased, and in the space of two hundred years became a formidable
+power, being at the end of this period combined into four Sultanies, the
+heads of which were at Bagdad, Damascus, Aleppo, and Iconium. The first
+of these was erected A.D. 1055; the two next A.D. 1079, and the last
+A.D. 1080--all of them within twenty-five years, and the three last
+within two."
+
+These four Sultanies are doubtless signified by "the four angels" that
+were bound in the river Euphrates. The Euphrates here is employed as a
+symbol, not of the Turks themselves--for the horsemen are their symbol,
+as we shall see--but of the binding of the angels. The use of this word
+as a symbol is derived from a fact of history, being the object,
+according to Herodotus, that kept Cyrus back from entering the city of
+Babylon. While the Persian monarch surrounded the walls of that ancient
+metropolis of the Babylonian empire, with his army, he was held in
+restraint by the river Euphrates; and it was not until he had diverted
+its waters into an artificial channel that he gained an entrance. So,
+also, these Sultanies, or leaders of the Turks, were held under
+restraint as if bound by the river Euphrates, until the time appointed
+for them to go forth on their mission of conquest. Different causes held
+them back. For a long time they were involved in fierce and almost
+continuous wars with the neighboring Tartar tribes on the east and the
+north, and at the same time the Crusaders of Europe were carrying on a
+determined war with the Saracens for the possession of the Holy Land.
+For two centuries the armies of Christendom poured into Syria and
+Palestine to recover from the hands of the "infidels," as they were
+called, the holy sepulchre and the country that gave birth to
+Christianity; but when Europe finally abandoned the project, then went
+forth the command to loose the four angels, "which were prepared for an
+hour, and a day, and a month, and a year, for to slay the third part of
+man." To kill men symbolically, I have already shown, signifies the
+destruction either of an empire as a political body or of the church
+(that is, the so-called church) as a religious body. The locusts under
+the fifth trumpet were to do neither; but the symbolic characters of
+this vision are "to slay the third part of men," by which is set forth
+the fall and subjugation of the Eastern empire and church; just as,
+under the fifth trumpet, the fall of the Western empire was described by
+the darkening of a third part of the sun, moon, and stars.
+
+Before considering the time-prophecy in this vision, we will pass on to
+notice a few particulars respecting the horses and their riders. The
+horsemen possessed breastplates of fire, jacinth, and brimstone; while
+out of the mouths of the horses proceeded fire, smoke, and brimstone.
+There is evidently a special design in distinguishing between the horses
+and their riders. These symbols, being drawn from different sources--the
+former from the natural world and the latter from human life--point out
+the two characteristics of the Turks as a politico-religious power. The
+symbolic description of the two is almost identical. The horsemen had
+breastplates of fire, jacinth (purplish or reddish blue), and brimstone.
+This describes the character of the Turks as a religious system. Out of
+the horses' mouths proceeded fire, smoke, and brimstone, which
+represents the Moslems as a political power. The only difference is that
+the smoke is substituted for the jacinth, but they very nearly agree in
+color. We are thus brought to the conclusion that the political and the
+religious power of the Turks is in harmony and agreement with each
+other--united in the closest manner possible, like a horse and its
+rider, and both animated by the same spirit. That spirit is perhaps
+their fierce, fanatical, aggressive, intolerant character.
+
+The tails of the horses were like serpents with heads, their power being
+in their mouth and in their tails--the one a lion, the other a serpent.
+It was by the fire, the smoke, and the brimstone that came from their
+lion-heads that the third part of men was killed, or their conquests
+were made; then with their serpent-like tails would they torment or
+"hurt" all those who would not adopt the Moslem faith, being in this
+respect like the scorpion locusts. Their lion-heads would denote their
+invincible strength and courage; and their serpent-tails, the tormenting
+sting inflicted upon those whom they subdued but who would not accept
+their religion. It is not said that the riders were the direct agents of
+destruction--not the Moslem faith as a religion--but it was the horses
+that accomplished the deadly work--the Ottomans as a political body.
+This was the power that extended conquests and established their empire,
+although it was accompanied by the religious system, working in perfect
+harmony.
+
+It is said that the "rest of the men which were not killed by these
+plagues" repented not. This expression doubtless signifies the Western,
+or Latin, church. They saw these judgments of the Euphratean horsemen on
+the Eastern empire, and the triumph of the Moslem sword and faith (the
+woe fell as a judgment upon the Eastern church); still, they continued
+as before in their abominable idolatries, by which is probably meant
+their worship of the virgin Mary, saints, relics, and images. There was
+no reformation. Error, superstition, and ecclesiastical usurpation
+prevailed as before.
+
+The Turks obtained their first victory over the Christians of the
+Eastern, or Greek, empire in A.D. 1281. Within ten years the Latins who
+inhabited Palestine were entirely overthrown (see Gibbon, Vol. VI, p.
+47), and the way was now clear for Turkish aggression against the Greek
+empire. Before the end of the century the four Sultanies mentioned were
+combined into one consolidated empire under Osman (corrupted by
+Europeans into Ottoman) and from him took the name which it still
+retains--the Ottoman empire. From the time they were let loose, the
+Turks continued their aggressions until A.D. 1453, when Constantinople
+fell before their victorious arms, and the Eastern empire, with the last
+of the Constantines, sunk to rise no more. "The Turkish sword and the
+religion of the Koran were enthroned in the Christian metropolis of the
+Roman emperors; and the proud Moslem had the Christian dog completely
+under his foot." The Ottoman power, however, continued to grow and make
+new conquests until the year A.D. 1672, when they conducted a successful
+campaign against Poland, in which forty-eight towns and villages were
+ceded to the Sultan, with promise of an annual tribute of two hundred
+and twenty thousand ducats. See Encyclopaedia Britannica, Art. Turkey.
+This was the last victory they ever gained wherein the Ottoman empire
+obtained any advantage. A little later they marched against Vienna, but
+sustained a miserable defeat. "Venice and Russia now declared war
+against Turkey; misfortune followed misfortune; city after city was rent
+away from the empire; the Austrians were in possession of almost the
+whole of Hungary, the Italians of almost all the Morea." Encyclopaedia
+Britannica, Art. Turkey. So the power of the Ottomans to extend their
+conquests and to add to their empire, ended with the victory over the
+Poles in A.D. 1672. This fact is even admitted by Demetrius Cantemir,
+prince of Moldavia, one of their historians, in the following language:
+"This was the _last_ victory by which any advantage accrued to the
+Othman state, or any city or province was annexed to the ancient bounds
+of the empire." In accordance with this statement, the same historian
+entitles the first part of his history up to the victory over the Poles
+in 1672 the History of _the Growth of the Othman Empire_, and the
+remaining portion, _The Decay of the Othman Empire_.
+
+Calculating now the time during which these horsemen were prepared to
+extend their conquests--"an hour, and a day, and a month, and a
+year"--we find according to prophetic, or symbolic, time--thirty days in
+a month, three hundred and sixty in a year--that it signifies three
+hundred and ninety-one years and fifteen days. This is exactly the
+period of time that elapsed between their first victory in A.D. 1281 and
+their last conquest in A.D. 1672. I can not verify the fifteen days,
+because no history at my command states the exact days of the month on
+which these victories occurred.
+
+One more point of importance must be considered before we conclude this
+chapter, and that is the continuance of the Ottoman power. The first, or
+Saracen, woe had power to torment men "five months," or one hundred and
+fifty years, during which time they continued their ravages. The second
+woe began when the command was given to loose the four angels, or the
+beginning of the Ottoman conquests. "An hour, and a day, and a month,
+and a year," or three hundred and ninety-one years, marked the time
+during which they were "prepared" to extend their conquests. But it is
+not stated that the woe itself, or the Ottoman power, would then cease;
+for it is not represented as ending until after the death and the
+resurrection of the witnesses (chap. 11:14), immediately following which
+the coming of Christ and the general judgment, or the third woe, is
+described. Verses 15-18. The Turkish power has made no advance for
+centuries, but has been on the decline; yet it will endure for its
+allotted time. It furnishes us a way-mark by which we can determine our
+position along the pathway of time; for when it falls, we may rest
+assured that the coming of Christ is imminent.
+
+For nearly two centuries it has been the wonder of civilized nations how
+that corrupt, tyrannical government, which has been described as a
+"despotism tempered by assassination," could exist in the increased
+light and onward advance of modern civilization. Concerning its position
+in Europe, Judson, in his recent history of Europe in the Nineteenth
+Century, says: "The Turkish empire has been an element of unrest in
+Europe. It has long been plain to all that it is not permanent. It has
+taken no root. The Turks are merely encamped in Europe; and it is merely
+a question of time when the last of them must return across the
+Bosphorus." Pp. 269, 270. But Turkey will continue to hold this
+territory of the old Greek empire until the time appointed by the Father
+for her overthrow. The nations of Europe have often conspired for her
+overthrow. This is what is known as the great Eastern Question, which
+has been described by one writer as "the expulsion of the Turk from
+Europe, and the scramble for his territory." But it has not yet been
+accomplished, for the very reason doubtless, that it _could not_ take
+place before the resurrection of the witnesses, of which we will speak
+later. Judson thus continues his account of the matter: "As soon as this
+idea was realized [that Turkish power in Europe must fall] by the
+Western nations, in place of the dread of the Turk which had so long
+been part and parcel of European thinking, the question of the disposal
+to be made of the Turkish possessions became matter of live interest.
+And this is the Eastern Question. The Greek empire vanished forever when
+the last Constantine fell in 1453. The only problem is one of partition.
+And the heart of it all is the disposal to be made of Constantinople.
+That imperial city is a site that, in strong hands, means power and
+wealth. What shall become of it? Russia early formed designs of
+conquest.... The empress Catherine ... had a grand scheme for a
+restoration of the Greek empire under a Russian prince. Alexander I., at
+Tilsit, planned a partition of the Ottoman empire with Napoleon, but the
+latter declined to see Constantinople in Russian hands.
+'Constantinople,' said he, 'is the empire of the world.' In 1844
+Nicholas visited England and made guarded suggestions to the
+prime-minister about the Turkish lands. The Ottoman empire, said he, was
+a sick man, nearly at the last extremity.... England declined to plan
+for a share of the inheritance, and nothing was done. In 1853 Nicholas
+resumed the subject with the British ambassador at St. Petersburg. The
+sick man, he now held, was at the point of death.... But again England
+declined and, indeed, the next year went to war with Russia to save the
+sick man from a premature end at the hands of the would-be administrator
+of the estate. Another power doubly interested in the future of the
+Turkish dominions is Austria. That empire has been the traditional enemy
+of the Turk, and at the end of the seventeenth century was the actual
+bulwark of Europe against Mohammedan conquest. When the tide of war
+rolled the other way, Austria was ready to share in the spoils. Twice
+near the end of the eighteenth century, was an alliance made between
+Russia and Austria for the partition of Turkey," etc. Pp. 270, 271.
+Thus, we find that these designs of nations for the overthrow of Turkey
+have so far been overruled; for God will not allow that power to come to
+"a _premature end_."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+ And I saw another mighty angel come down from heaven, clothed
+ with a cloud: and a rainbow was upon his head, and his face was
+ as it were the sun, and his feet as pillars of fire:
+
+ 2. And he had in his hand a little book open: and he set his
+ right foot upon the sea, and his left foot on the earth,
+
+ 3. And cried with a loud voice, as when a lion roareth: and when
+ he had cried, seven thunders uttered their voices.
+
+ 4. And when the seven thunders had uttered their voices, I was
+ about to write: and I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me,
+ Seal up those things which the seven thunders uttered, and write
+ them not.
+
+ 5. And the angel which I saw stand upon the sea and upon the
+ earth lifted up his hand to heaven,
+
+ 6. And sware by him that liveth for ever and ever, who created
+ heaven, and the things that therein are, and the earth, and the
+ things that therein are, and the sea, and the things which are
+ therein, that there should be time no longer:
+
+ 7. But in the days of the voice of the seventh angel, when he
+ shall begin to sound, the mystery of God should be finished, as
+ he hath declared to his servants the prophets.
+
+ 8. And the voice which I heard from heaven spake unto me again,
+ and said, Go and take the little book which is open in the hand
+ of the angel which standeth upon the sea and upon the earth.
+
+ 9. And I went unto the angel, and said unto him, Give me the
+ little book. And he said unto me, Take it, and eat it up; and it
+ shall make thy belly bitter, but it shall be in thy mouth sweet
+ as honey.
+
+ 10. And I took the little book out of the angel's hand, and ate
+ it up; and it was in my mouth sweet as honey: and as soon as I
+ had eaten it, my belly was bitter.
+
+ 11. And he said unto me, Thou must prophesy again before many
+ peoples, and nations, and tongues, and kings.
+
+In the preceding chapter we had a history of the two great woes that
+befell apostate Christendom. In this chapter we have in contrast a
+portion of the history of God's true church, to show us that all was not
+lost even though the Eastern church was greviously tormented by the
+serpent-tails of the horses and the Western church still continued as
+before in her sorceries, fornications, and abominable idolatries.
+
+The symbol is that of an angel from heaven. This is not the seventh, or
+the third woe angel, who ushers in the general judgment (chap.
+11:15-18), but it is a special messenger appearing on earth with the
+awful message that the end of time is near and that when the seventh
+angel soon begins to sound the mystery of God shall be finished and
+there shall be time no longer. This mighty angel is symbolical of some
+human agencies of distinguished character; for it stands in striking
+contrast with the destructive powers described under the preceding
+trumpets. When angels appear on the panoramic scene only in the temple
+above, they themselves are not symbolic characters, but only the
+conductors of the Revelation; but whenever they appear on earth, they
+represent distinguished agencies among men. In the present vision the
+symbol is drawn, not from the natural world, but from the heavenly, and
+the scene is laid upon earth; therefore we must look to the history of
+the church to find its fulfilment in some distinguished agencies
+appearing for the defence of Christ and his truth. The cloud, rainbow,
+face as the sun, and feet as pillars of fire, are doubtless intended to
+set forth their beautiful, benignant character, and to show that the
+angel is not such an one as those that were bound in the river
+Euphrates. This one has the bow of covenant promise upon his head, and
+his face shines as the sun.
+
+Where, then, in the history of God's true church do we find the agencies
+corresponding to the symbol? We find them in the _holy ministry_ that he
+has raised up and is now sending forth to preach the pure gospel and to
+declare the speedy sounding of the seventh trumpet and the coming of the
+Lord Jesus Christ to earth again.
+
+ "Lo, the angel now is standing on the sea and on the land;
+ How his voice the air is rending as to God he lifts his hand!
+ What an awful, awful message! Help us, Lord, this truth to see:
+ When the seventh trumpet thunders, then shall time no longer be.
+
+ "One more trumpet yet to summon us before the judgment seat,
+ Then the time of our frail planet will be said to be complete.
+ How the wicked will be wailing and the righteous overjoyed
+ When with fire the heav'ns are burning and the earth shall be destroyed!"
+
+This angel "set his right foot upon the sea, and his left foot on the
+earth," that his lion-like voice might be heard over all the world. This
+shows that the earth (the Apocalyptic earth--the territory of the Roman
+empire) was not the only place where the message was to be borne; it was
+to be sounded upon the sea, which would indicate its promulgation among
+all nations.
+
+When his mighty voice sounded, "seven thunders uttered their voices";
+and when about to record what they said, John was commanded to "seal up
+those things which the seven thunders uttered, and write them not." The
+fact that they were not to be recorded shows that they were to
+constitute no part of this Revelation. John evidently thought so at
+first; for they had the appearance of revelation, something clothed with
+divine authority, but they were not to be delivered to the church. What,
+then, were they? The most probable supposition is, that they were things
+that God for some reason did not choose to have revealed. Their sayings
+may have described events just prior to the end so perfectly as to leave
+the world in no doubt respecting the nearness of Christ's second coming;
+whereas it appears in the Scriptures that God has designed that it
+should be a matter of considerable uncertainty, especially to the
+unsaved. However, we can obtain no satisfactory explanation of the
+things uttered by the seven thunders; for we can not identify positively
+what John was commanded to "seal up."
+
+This angel had in his hand a little book that John was required to take
+and eat. In advancing and taking the book, John himself becomes an actor
+in the symbolic scene, the same as was the book and the angel from whose
+hand he took it. Therefore we must now consider John a symbol of
+something in this vision. Some of the commentators have supposed that
+this book signified the remainder of the book of Revelation. But John
+was commanded to _write_ the Revelations, not to _eat_ them. And if he
+ate them, how, then, could they constitute the remainder of the book?
+Its true signification is undoubtedly the word of God. In making such an
+application we do not necessarily make one book merely a symbol of a
+larger one, as the Bible is, but of God's _revealed will_, just the same
+as the sealed book of chapter V was the symbol of the divine purposes.
+When we come to explain the resurrection of the witnesses in chapter XI,
+it will be found that this is the time when the word of God is again
+taught in all its purity, being restored for the first time, in its
+perfect sense, since the morning time of this dispensation. A great
+spiritual famine has for centuries overspread the earth. Since the time
+the black horse of the third seal entered on his career, the people have
+been starving for spiritual food. The few crumbs that have been dropped
+during the reign of Protestantism have been eagerly gathered up by the
+spiritually-minded; but, thank God! the time has now arrived when the
+messengers appear with food from heaven, and the multitudes of earth's
+starving millions can "eat in plenty, and be satisfied, and praise the
+name of the Lord God." Joel 2:26. Halleluiah!
+
+In taking the book from the hand of the angel and eating it, John became
+a symbol of the church, or people of God, who receive the Word from the
+hand of his ministers. The sweetness of its taste signifies the
+eagerness with which people receive it and the gladness experienced when
+they first partake of the heavenly manna; while the bitterness resulting
+therefrom probably symbolizes the bitter persecutions and oppositions of
+which it is the occasion. "Yea, and _all_ that will live godly in Christ
+Jesus shall suffer persecution." 2 Tim. 3:12.
+
+John was told to "prophesy again before many peoples, and nations, and
+tongues, and kings," which signifies that the people of God must again
+be witnesses of his saving grace throughout all the world. In the
+beginning of this dispensation all his people prophesied among the
+nations; for Christ had said unto them, "Ye shall be _witnesses_ unto
+me, both in Jerusalem, and in Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the
+uttermost parts of the earth." Acts 1:8. So, also, in this evening time
+we go forth again on the same mission, inspired by the soon-coming of
+our Savior.
+
+"Even so come, Lord Jesus."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+ And there was given me a reed like unto a rod: and the angel
+ stood, saying, Rise, and measure the temple of God, and the
+ altar, and them that worship therein.
+
+ 2. But the court which is without the temple leave out, and
+ measure it not; for it is given unto the Gentiles: and the holy
+ city shall they tread under foot forty and two months.
+
+ 3. And I will give power unto my two witnesses, and they shall
+ prophesy a thousand two hundred and threescore days, clothed in
+ sackcloth.
+
+ 4. These are the two olive-trees, and the two candlesticks
+ standing before the God of the earth.
+
+ 5. And if any man will hurt them, fire proceedeth out of their
+ mouth, and devoureth their enemies: and if any man will hurt
+ them, he must in this manner be killed.
+
+ 6. These have power to shut heaven, that it rain not in the days
+ of their prophecy: and have power over waters to turn them to
+ blood, and to smite the earth with all plagues, as often as they
+ will.
+
+The two principal objects of this vision is the city of Jerusalem with
+its holy temple and worshipers, and two witnesses prophesying for twelve
+hundred and sixty days. These are not objects from the natural world;
+therefore we may conclude that we have not here to do with political
+events, while the character of the symbols point us with certainty to
+the history of the church.
+
+There is a possibility that the speaker here is not the angel of the
+preceding chapter; for the words in verse 1 "and the angel stood" may be
+an interpolation, they being found in very few manuscripts. See the
+Revised Version and the Emphatic Diaglott, Greek and English. If not,
+then he must be the angel through whom the Revelation was given. Chap.
+1:1; 22:8. Whether the angel is the same as the one in the preceding
+chapter or not, it is evident that that series of prophecy ends with
+chapter 10, and that he here introduces a new line of events running
+over the entire gospel dispensation[7], in which John as an active agent
+in the panoramic vision still stands as a symbol of the people of God,
+who, in striking contrast with the blind devotees of an apostate church,
+are commanded to "measure the temple of God, and the altar, and them
+that worship therein." The temple with its altar and court and the holy
+city itself, here used as symbols, are representative of something
+analagous, and refer to no other than the outward, visible church of God
+with its doctrines and worshipers. Its measurement is designed to show
+how far it conforms to the true church; while the rod is a symbol of the
+revealed will of God, by which the measurement is brought as to a true
+standard.
+
+[Footnote 7: This statement may seem to conflict with the classification
+of events in the "Diagram of the Revelation," where this prophecy is
+treated, not as an independent series, but as part of a compound series
+beginning with chapter 8 and ending with chapter 11. For thus
+classifying it my reason is, that the line of prophecy beginning with
+chapter 8 introduces the seven trumpets, and therefore the series is not
+complete until the seventh trumpet is given, which event concludes the
+line of truth given in the present chapter.]
+
+By noticing briefly the arrangement of the temple and the purposes to
+which the different apartments were put, we shall be able to understand
+better the design of this vision. The temple proper consisted of two
+apartments. In the first stood the altar of incense and other things; in
+the second, the ark of the covenant, etc. The priests officiated in the
+first apartment regularly, while into the second went the high-priest
+alone once every year. This, Paul informs us, was a shadow of a greater
+and more perfect tabernacle. Heb. 9:1-11; 8:2. The altar that is
+mentioned and that John was to measure is a symbol of the great cardinal
+doctrine of the church--the atonement and mediation of Christ. He was
+the sacrifice made for sin, through whom we have redemption and access
+unto God. John was also told to measure those who worshiped therein--the
+officiating ministers in the sanctuary--who were thus made symbols of
+the ministers and the teachers in the church. To measure the temple of
+God, then, was to ascertain the great doctrines taught in the Scriptures
+and symbolized by the sanctuary, the altar, and the priests; namely, the
+doctrines of the New Testament concerning God as the supreme lawgiver,
+the atonement of Jesus Christ as the only ground for justification, and
+the ministers whom he appointed to officiate in his church.
+
+These are the great principles corrupted by the Papacy. Instead of the
+one supreme God, we find another in the temple of God, "showing himself
+that _he_ is God." Christ was not recognized as the supreme and only
+head of the church; but instead the Pope claimed the title of universal
+head and legislated supreme, while his decrees and anathemas were
+accepted as from Jehovah himself. Christ was not regarded as the only
+mediator between God and man, but the virgin Mary and the saints were
+exalted to share the mediatorial throne, the mother being more honored
+than the Son. Penance, counting of beads, works of supererogation, were
+believed to be more effectual in obtaining forgiveness of sin than
+living faith in our only Redeemer. Finally, in place of the humble
+ministers of Christ whom he appointed to officiate in his church, there
+were haughty lords and rulers, making the most extravagant claims to
+power and authority over the minds and consciences of men. The court of
+the temple was the space outside of the sanctuary occupied by the
+congregation while the worship within was conducted by the priests. John
+was told to leave this out and measure it not; for it was given to the
+Gentiles to tread under foot, or profane, for the space of forty and two
+months, or twelve hundred and sixty days. In the estimation of a Jew,
+the Gentiles were all idolaters and outside of God's covenant favor. As
+a symbol, then, we are to understand that the great body of worshipers
+thus brought to view are not the true children of God at all, but are,
+as it were, uncircumcised, idolatrous Gentiles, having no connection
+whatever with the great head of the church and no part in the covenant
+of his mercy. The whole city of Jerusalem was to be given over to this
+profane multitude and by them desecrated for forty-two months, denoting
+that this great company of worshipers was to constitute the visible,
+external church during the period specified. It is as though the city of
+Jerusalem were occupied by the idolatrous heathen, and the Jews driven
+out as aliens. These Gentiles, then, were to constitute the one great
+(so-called) universal church--the Church of Rome.
+
+Forty and two months, or twelve hundred and sixty days, are symbolic
+time, signifying twelve hundred and sixty years, during which time the
+power of apostasy was to reign supreme over the minds of men. The same
+period is also referred to frequently in subsequent chapters. It is
+necessary, then, for us to ascertain at what period of time the church
+was given over to a profane multitude that was not the true people of
+God. Some have supposed that this must refer to the time when Popery
+became fully established. Such, however, could not be the case (although
+the time-period includes that important event); for the power of
+apostasy was greatly developed centuries before the final supremacy of
+the Popes was established, and was necessary in order to prepare the way
+for their exaltation. The Popes obtained their authority by degrees. In
+A.D. 606 the emperor Phocas conferred the title "Universal Bishop" upon
+the Pope of Rome. In A.D. 756 the Pope became a temporal sovereign. Yet
+the power of Papal usurpation did not reach the summit until the reign
+of the impious Hildebrand, who succeeded to the Popedom in A.D. 1073,
+under the title of Gregory VII. But according to the symbols before us,
+we must look for a period not so much when the Popes were enabled to
+definitely enforce their arrogant claims, as when the ministry became
+corrupted and when the inhabitants of the city, or the devotees of the
+visible church, became a profane multitude entirely estranged from the
+covenant of promise. The usurpations of the ministry that accompanied
+this great change in the external church have been considered already
+under the symbols of chapter VI. This mighty transformation to a church
+containing nothing but uncircumcised Gentiles was fully accomplished
+during the latter half of the third century, from which date we must
+look for the true disciples of the Lord as entirely separate from the
+hierarchy. A few quotations from standard and ecclesiastical histories
+will show this important epoch in the rise of the Papacy that plunged
+the world into almost universal apostasy.
+
+"The living church retiring gradually within the lonely sanctuary of a
+few solitary hearts, an external church was substituted in its place,
+and all its forms were declared to be of divine appointment. Salvation
+no longer flowing from the Word, which was henceforward put out of
+sight, the priests affirmed that it was conveyed by means of the forms
+they had themselves invented, and that no one could obtain it but by
+these channels.... The doctrine of the church and the necessity of its
+visible unity, which had begun to gain ground in the _third century_,
+favored the pretensions of Rome." D'Aubigne's History of the
+Reformation, Book I, Chap. 1.
+
+"At the end of the third century almost half the inhabitants of the
+Roman empire, and of several neighboring countries, professed the faith
+of Christ. About this time endeavors to preserve a unity of belief, and
+of church discipline, occasioned numberless disputes among those of
+different opinions, and led to the establishment of an ecclesiastical
+tyranny." Encyclopaedia of Religious Knowledge.
+
+Concerning the Roman diocese, the Encyclopaedia Britannica says, "Before
+the termination of the third century the office was held to be of such
+importance that its succession was a matter of interest to ecclesiastics
+living in distant sees." Vol. XIX, p. 488.
+
+"Almost proportionate with the extension of Christianity was the
+decrease in the church of vital piety. A philosophizing spirit among the
+higher, and a wild monkish superstition among the lower orders, fast
+took the place in the third century of the faith and humility of the
+first Christians. Many of the clergy became very corrupt, and
+excessively ambitious. In consequence of this there was an awful
+defection of Christianity." Marsh's Church History, p. 185.
+
+"We have found it almost necessary to separate, and indeed widely to
+distinguish the events of the two first, from those of the third
+century, for nearly at this point we are disposed to place the FIRST
+CRISIS in the internal history of the church." Waddington's Church
+History.
+
+"This season of external prosperity was improved by the ministers of the
+church for the exertion of new claims, and the assumption of powers with
+which they had not been previously invested. At first these claims were
+modestly urged, and gradually allowed; but they laid a foundation for
+the encroachments which were afterwards made upon the rights of the
+whole Christian community, and for lofty pretensions to the right of
+supremacy and spiritual dominion.... Several alterations in the form of
+church government appear to have been introduced during the third
+century. Some degree of pomp was thought necessary.... The external
+dignity of the ministers of religion was accompanied by a still greater
+change in its discipline.... Many of the Jewish and Pagan proselytes ...
+languished in the absence of ceremonies which were naturally adapted to
+the taste of the unreflecting multitude, while the insolent infidel
+haughtily insisted upon the inanity of a religion which was not
+manifested by an external symbol or decoration. In order to accommodate
+Christianity to these prejudices, a number of rites were instituted; and
+while the dignified titles of the Jewish priesthood were through a
+compliance with the prejudices of that people, conferred upon the
+Christian teachers, many ceremonies were introduced which coincided with
+the genius of Paganism. The true gospels were taught by sensible images,
+and many of the ceremonies employed in celebrating the heathen mysteries
+were observed in the institutions of Christ, which soon in their turn
+obtained the name of mysteries, and served as a melancholy precedent for
+future innovations, and as a foundation for that structure of absurdity
+and superstition which deformed and disgraced the church." Rutter's
+History of the Church, pp. 52-56.
+
+This "season of external prosperity" mentioned by Rutter began with the
+accession of Gallienus to the imperial throne in A.D. 260. Up to this
+time the hand of persecution had been raised against the church almost
+incessantly; but from 260 until the reign of Diocletian persecution
+almost ceased, during this space of about forty years. But this period
+also marked the greatest decline in spiritual things and a marvelous
+development of the hierarchy. Speaking of the bishop of Rome in these
+times, Dowling says, "He far surpassed all his brethren in the
+magnificence and splendor of the church over which he presided; in the
+riches of his revenues and possessions; in the number and variety of his
+ministers; in his credit with the people; and in his sumptuous and
+splendid manner of living." History of Romanism, p. 34.
+
+Ammianus Marcellinus, a Roman historian, who lived during these times,
+adverting to this subject, says: "It was no wonder to see those who were
+ambitious of human greatness, contending with so much heat and animosity
+for that dignity, because when they had obtained it, they were sure to
+be enriched by the offerings of the matrons, and of appearing abroad in
+great splendor, of being admired for their costly coaches, and sumptuous
+feasts, outdoing sovereign princes in the expenses of their table." This
+led Proetextatus, a heathen, who was praefect of the city, to say, "Make
+me bishop of Rome, and I'll be a Christian too!"
+
+Speaking of the period now under consideration, Eusebius, "the father of
+church history," "mentions one Paul, who was at this time bishop of
+Antioch; who lived in luxury and licentiousness, and who was a teacher
+of erroneous doctrines, and usurped so great authority that the people
+feared to venture to accuse him. In the conclusion of the same chapter
+in which this is found, he shows that after a general council was held
+at Antioch, this Paul was excommunicated and robbed of his bishopric by
+the bishops of Rome and Italy; from this it appears that they possessed
+an authority still greater than that usurped by Paul." The following are
+his words: "Paul, therefore, having thus fallen from the episcopate,
+together with the true faith as already said, Domnus succeeded in
+administration of the church at Antioch. But Paul being unwilling to
+leave the building of the church, an appeal was made to the emperor
+Aurelian, who decided most equitably on the business, ordering the
+building to be given up to those whom the Christian bishops of Italy and
+Rome should write." Eccl. History, Book VII, Chap. 30. The Encyclopaedia
+Britannica says that this council at which Paul was excommunicated was
+held "probably in the year 268," and that "Paul continued in his office
+until the year 272, when the city was taken by the emperor Aurelian, who
+decided in person that the church-building belonged to the bishop who
+was in epistolary communication with the bishops of Rome and Italy."
+Vol. XVIII, p. 429.
+
+The above extracts show not only the development of error in the church,
+but also the great power already obtained by the hierarchy. Geo. Fisher
+says, "The accession of Constantine [A.D. 312] found the church so
+firmly organized under the hierarchy that it could not lose its identity
+by being absolutely merged in the state." History of the Christian
+Church, p. 99.
+
+In the year A.D. 270 Anthony, an Egyptian, the founder of the monastic
+institution, fixed his abode in the deserts of Egypt and formed monks
+into organized bodies. "Influenced by these eminent examples [Anthony,
+Hilarion, et al.] immense multitudes betook themselves to the desert,
+and innumerable monasteries were fixed in Egypt, Ethiopia, Lybia and
+Syria. Some of the Egyptian abbots are spoken of as having had five,
+seven, or even ten thousand monks under their personal direction; and
+the Thebias, as well as certain spots in Arabia, are reported to have
+been literally crowded with solitaries. Nearly a hundred thousand of all
+classes, it is said, were at one time to be found in Egypt.... Although
+the enthusiasm might be at a lower ebb in one country than in another,
+it _actually affected the church universal_, so far as the extant
+materials of ecclesiastical history enables us to trace its rise and
+progress.... The more rigid and heroic of the Christian anchorets
+dispensed with all clothing except a rug, or a few palm leaves round the
+loins. Most of them abstained from the use of water for ablution; nor
+did they usually wash or change the garments they had once put on; thus
+_St. Anthony_ [the founder of this order] bequeathed to Athanasius a
+skin in which his sacred person had been wrapped for half a century.
+They also allowed their beards and nails to grow, and sometimes became
+so hirsute, as to be actually mistaken for hyaenas or bears." Hist. of
+Romanism, pp. 88, 89. Reader, what was the condition of the so-called
+church in A.D. 270 that could make the introduction of such abominations
+possible? Although many more historical quotations on this point might
+be added, I will conclude with the two following extracts from Joseph
+Milner.
+
+"We shall, for the present, leave Anthony propagating the monastic
+dispositions, and extending its influence not only into the next
+century, but for many ages after, and conclude this view of the state of
+the _third century_, with expressing our regret that the faith and love
+of the gospel received toward the close of it a dreadful blow from the
+encouragement of this unchristian practise." Cen. III, Chap. 20.
+
+"Moral, and philosophical, and monastic instructions will not effect for
+men what is to be expected from evangelical doctrine. And if the faith
+of Christ was so much declined (and its decayed state _ought to be dated
+from about the year 270_), we need not wonder that such scenes as
+Eusebius hints at without any circumstantial details took place in the
+Christian world." Cent. IV, Chap. 1.
+
+After reading the foregoing statements of historians, the reader will, I
+believe, agree with me that the year 270 is a consistent date to mark
+the time when the visible external church was wholly given over to the
+profane multitude of uncircumcised, idolatrous Gentiles to tread under
+foot. Measuring forward the allotted period of twelve hundred and sixty
+years brings us to the exact date of the first Protestant creed (_the
+Augsburg Confession_) in A.D. 1530. We must point to this date both for
+the end of Rome's universal spiritual supremacy and for the rise of
+Protestantism. D'Aubigne, in his History of the Reformation, when he
+comes to this period, says: "The conflicts hitherto described have been
+only partial; we are entering upon a new period, that of general
+battles. Spires (1529) and Ausburg (1530) are names that shine forth
+with more immortal glory than Marathon, Pavia, or Marengo. Forces that
+up to the present time were separate, are now uniting into one energetic
+band." Book XVIII, Chap. 1. "The first two books of this volume contain
+the most important epochs of the reformation--the Protest of Spires, and
+the Confession of Augsburg.... I determined on bringing the reformation
+of Germany and German Switzerland to the _decisive epochs_ of 1530 and
+1531. The history of the reformation, properly so called, is then in my
+opinion almost complete in those countries. The work of faith has there
+attained its apogee: that of conferences, of interims, of diplomacy
+begins.... The movement of the sixteenth century has there made its
+effort. I said from the very first, It is the history of the reformation
+and not of Protestantism that I am relating." D'Aubigne, Preface to Vol.
+V.
+
+The next important object in the vision is the "two witnesses" that
+prophecied in sackcloth. From the description given, it would appear at
+first that these witnesses were active intelligent agents; and as such,
+belonging to the department of human life, they would symbolize the
+church, the number two denoting the ministry and the people of God. But
+the church is already symbolized in this chapter, the angel representing
+the ministry, as in the preceding chapter, and John, who is clearly one
+of the symbolic agents in this vision, representing the church;
+therefore the two witnesses must be representative of something else.
+Since the actions ascribed to them are drawn from the department of
+human life, it is evident that their interpretation is to be found in
+connection with the affairs of the church. By way of explanation, verse
+4 represents them to be "the two olive-trees, and the two candle-sticks
+standing before the God of the earth," although it is not stated that
+any olive-trees and candle-sticks were shown in this prophetic vision.
+In this reference is made to the fourth chapter of Zechariah, where two
+olive-trees are represented as standing one on each side of a golden
+candle-stick, distilling into it their oil for light. When asked for the
+signification of the two olive-trees and the candlestick, the angel
+answered, "This is the _Word_ of the Lord ... by my _Spirit_, saith the
+Lord." Ver. 6. That the Word of God and the Spirit of God are special
+witnesses is proved by many texts. Jesus said, "Search the Scriptures
+... they are they which _testify_ of me." John 6:39. "This gospel of the
+kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a _witness_ unto all
+nations." Mat. 24:14. "The Holy Ghost also is a _witness_." Heb. 10:15.
+"The Spirit itself beareth _witness_." Rom. 8:16. "It is the Spirit that
+beareth _witness_." 1 John 5:6. It is the Spirit acting in conjunction
+with the Word of God that gives spiritual life, through regeneration,
+unto men, and which opens their understanding that they may know the
+things of God. 2 Cor. 2:9-15.
+
+God may have given us the explanation that these two witnesses were the
+same as the olive-trees and the candle-sticks to prevent our being led
+astray with the supposition that they were actually intelligent agents.
+(I speak humanly.) Accepting this statement, the actions of these
+witnesses here described can be explained only by the figure of speech
+known as Personification, by which it is proper, under certain
+conditions, to attribute life, action, and intelligence to inanimate
+objects. Thus, the blood of Abel is said to have cried from the ground.
+Gen. 4:9, 10. "The stone shall cry out of the wall, and the beam out of
+the timber shall answer it." Hab. 2:11. "The hire of the laborers ...
+which is of you kept back by fraud crieth: and the cries ... are entered
+into the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth." Jas. 5:4. "The mountains and the
+hills shall break forth before you into singing, and all the trees of
+the field shall clap their hands." Isa. 55:12. I would not attempt to
+vary from the general order and explain these two witnesses by the
+figure of personification, were it not for the fact that the two
+olive-trees and the two candle-sticks are here given as a means of
+explanation; and trees and candle-sticks, we know, are not active,
+intelligent agents, and consequently do not necessarily symbolize such.
+
+To "hurt" the Word and Spirit of God is to oppose, corrupt, or pervert
+their testimony and to turn people away from them; and the judgments of
+Heaven are pronounced in that Word and by that Spirit against such as
+turn away from the truth unto fables. They shall have their part in the
+lake that burns with fire and brimstone. Rev. 20:15; 22:8. It is also
+said of them: "These have power to shut heaven, that it rain not in the
+days of their prophecy: and have power over waters to turn them to
+blood, and to smite the earth with all plagues, as often as they will."
+This indicates the fact that these were God's own special witnesses sent
+in his name and by his authority, as were the prophets of old. Elijah
+shut up heaven by prayer; Moses called down the plagues upon Egypt; and
+these were God's attestations that they were his divinely commissioned
+servants. So these two witnesses had power to shut heaven and to smite
+the earth with plagues, not literally, but herein is symbolically set
+forth the fact that they were God's appointed agents, even though
+despised and rejected, like Elijah in the midst of apostate Israel and
+Moses amid idolatrous Egypt, yet, like them, with the seal of Heaven
+upon their ministry.
+
+In the beginning of this dispensation these two witnesses were the
+vicars of Christ in his church upon earth. The word of God and the
+Spirit of God were the Governors of his people. At that time they had
+perfect freedom of action among the children of God; but when the
+apostasy arose, the governing power of the Word and Spirit of God in the
+church was gradually usurped by the rising hierarchy, until, finally,
+men had entire authority in what was called the visible church. This was
+brought about when, to quote Mosheim's words, the bishops grasped the
+power and authority "to prescribe authoritative rules of faith and
+manners." D'Aubigne explains it thus: "Salvation no longer flowing from
+the _Word_, which was henceforward put out of sight, the priests
+affirmed that it was conveyed by means of the forms they had themselves
+invented, and that no one could attain it except by these channels....
+Christ communicated to the apostles, and these to the bishops, the
+unction of the _Holy Spirit_; and this Spirit is to be procured only in
+that order of succession.... Faith in the heart no longer connected the
+members of the church, and they were united by means of bishops,
+archbishops, popes, mitres, canons and ceremonies." History of the
+Reformation, Book I, Chap. 1. Thus, the Word and Spirit of God as the
+true vicars of Christ in his church were finally expelled from what was
+looked upon as the one visible church, and with them the true worshipers
+also were driven out; and nothing remained in the public view except the
+great company of profane idolaters already referred to. The same is
+referred to in a subsequent chapter as the flight of the true church
+into the wilderness, where, hidden from sight, she had a place prepared
+of God for twelve hundred and sixty days. So after all, God had a true
+church during the Dark Ages--a people that stood in opposition to the
+abounding corruption and iniquity of the church of Rome; a people that
+rejected the established hierarchy and gave heed to the Word and Spirit
+of God. But their numbers were so few, comparatively, that the
+operations of the two witnesses were greatly limited; hence they are
+represented as being clothed in sackcloth, a symbol of melancholy and
+mourning.
+
+Among those who opposed the teachings of that apostate church were the
+Cathari, Poor Men of Lyons, Lombards, Albigenses, Waldenses, Vaudois,
+etc. The name Waldenses and Albigenses have frequently been loosely
+applied to all the bands of people that passed under various titles in
+different countries and that opposed the doctrines and ecclesiastical
+tyranny of Rome. Speaking of the twelfth century, Bowling says: "There
+existed at that dark period, when 'all the world wondered after the
+beast,' a numerous body of the disciples of Christ, who took the New
+Testament for their guidance and direction in all the affairs of
+religion, rejecting the doctrines and commandments of men. Their appeal
+was from the decisions of councils, and the authority of popes,
+cardinals, and prelates, to the law and the testimony--the words of
+Christ and his holy apostles." History of Romanism, p. 272. Egbert, a
+monkish writer of that age, speaking of them, says that he had often
+disputed with these heretics, "a sort of people," he adds, "who are very
+pernicious to the Catholic faith, which, like moths, they corrupt and
+destroy. They are armed," says he, "_with the words of Scripture_ which
+in any way seem to favor their sentiments, and with these they know how
+to defend their errors, and to oppose the Catholic truth. They are
+increased to great multitudes throughout all countries, to the great
+danger of the church [of Rome]."
+
+For lack of space, an extensive history of these interesting people can
+not be given; but a few references to them by their most inveterate
+enemies, the Papists themselves, are of such importance that I can not
+pass them by unnoticed. The testimony given by Evervinus, a zealous
+Catholic, in a letter he wrote to the celebrated Bernard, at the
+beginning of the twelfth century, relative to the doctrine and manners
+of these so-called _heretics_, is exceedingly valuable. Says he: "There
+have lately been some heretics discovered among us, near Colonge [sic:
+Cologne], of whom some have, with satisfaction returned again to the
+church. One that was a bishop among them, and his companions, openly
+opposed us, in the assembly of the clergy and laity, the lord-archbishop
+himself being present, with many of the nobility, maintaining their
+heresy from _the words of Christ and his apostles_. But, finding that
+they made no impression, they desired that a day might be fixed, upon
+which they might bring along with them men skilful in their faith,
+promising to return to the church, provided their teachers were unable
+to answer their opponents; but that otherwise, they would rather die
+than depart from their judgment.
+
+"Upon this declaration, having been admonished to repent, and three days
+allowed them for that purpose, they were seized by the people, in their
+excess of zeal, _and committed to the flames_! and, what is most
+astonishing, they came to the stake and endured the torment not only
+with patience, but even with joy. In this case, O holy father, were I
+present with you, I should be glad to ask you, how these members of
+Satan could persist in their heresy with such constancy and courage as
+is rarely to be found among the most religious in the faith of Christ?"
+
+He then proceeds: "Their heresy is this: They say that the church (of
+Christ) is only among themselves, because they alone follow the ways of
+Christ, and imitate the apostles, not seeking secular gains.... Whereas
+they say to us, 'Ye join house to house, and field to field, seeking the
+things of this world.'... They represent themselves as the poor of
+Christ's flock, who have no certain abode, fleeing from one city to
+another, like sheep in the midst of wolves, enduring persecution with
+the apostles and martyrs: though strict in their manner of
+life--_abstemious, laborious, devoted, and holy_ ... living as men who
+are not of the world. But you, say they, lovers of the world, have peace
+with the world, because ye are in it. False apostles, who adulterate the
+word of God, seeking their own things, have misled you and your
+ancestors. Whereas, we and our fathers, having been born and brought up
+in the apostolic doctrine, have continued in the grace of Christ, and
+shall continue so to the end.... They affirm that the apostolic dignity
+is corrupted by indulging itself in secular affairs, while it sits
+[professedly] in St Peter's chair. They do not hold with the baptism of
+infants, alleging that passage of the gospel, 'He that believeth and is
+baptized shall be saved.' They place no confidence in the intercession
+of saints and all things observed in the church, which have not been
+established by Christ himself, or his apostles, they pronounce to be
+superstitious. They do not admit of any purgatory fire after death,
+contending, that the souls of men, as soon as they depart out of the
+bodies, do enter into rest or punishment ... by which means they make
+void all the prayers and oblations of the faithful for the deceased....
+I must inform you also, that those of them who have returned to our
+church, tell us that they had great numbers of their persuasion,
+scattered almost everywhere.... And as for those who were burnt, they,
+in defense they made of themselves, told us that this heresy had been
+_concealed from the time of the martyrs_ [by which is meant the early
+period of Christianity] and that it had existed in Greece and other
+countries."
+
+Although Bernard began a strenuous opposition to these people, still he
+testifies: "If you ask them of their faith, nothing can be more
+Christian-like; and if you observe their conversation, nothing can be
+more blameless, and what they speak they make good by their actions....
+As to life and manners, he circumvents no man, overreaches no man, does
+violence to no man. He fasts much and eats not the bread of idleness;
+but works with his hands for his support."
+
+Claudius, archbishop of Turin, who joined in hunting and persecuting
+them to the death, writes, "Their heresy excepted, they generally live a
+purer life than other Christians." Again, "In their lives they are
+perfect, irreproachable, and without reproach among men, addicting
+themselves with all their might to the service of God."
+
+The sum and substance of their offense is mentioned by Cassini, a
+Franciscan friar, where he says, "That ALL THE ERRORS of these Waldenses
+consisted in this, that they denied the church of Rome to be the holy
+mother church, and _would not obey her traditions_."
+
+In conclusion I quote from the celebrated Roman Catholic historian
+Thuanus. He states their tenets as follows: "That the church of Rome,
+because it renounced the true faith of Christ, WAS THE WHORE OF BABYLON
+... that consequently _no obedience was to be paid to the Pope_, or to
+the bishops who maintain her errors; that a monastic life was the sink
+and dungeon of the church, the vows of which [relating to celibacy] were
+vain ... that the orders of the priesthood were marks of the great beast
+mentioned in the Apocalypse; that the fire of purgatory, the solemn
+mass, the consecration days of churches, the worship of saints, and
+propitiations for the dead, were the devices of Satan." Lib. VI, Sec.
+16, Lib. XXVII. The chief offense of these so-called heretics seems to
+have been that they denounced the Pope as "Antichrist" and the apostate
+church of Rome as "the Babylonish harlot."
+
+ 7. And when they shall have finished their testimony, the beast
+ that ascendeth out of the bottomless pit shall make war against
+ them, and shall overcome them, and kill them.
+
+ 8. And their dead bodies shall lie in the street of the great
+ city, which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt, where also
+ our Lord was crucified.
+
+ 9. And they of the people and kindreds and tongues and nations
+ shall see their dead bodies three days and an half, and shall
+ not suffer their dead bodies to be put in graves.
+
+ 10. And they that dwell upon the earth shall rejoice over them,
+ and make merry, and shall send gifts one to another; because
+ these two prophets tormented them that dwelt on the earth.
+
+ 11. And after three days and an half the Spirit of life from God
+ entered into them, and they stood upon their feet; and great
+ fear fell upon them which saw them.
+
+ 12. And they heard a great voice from heaven saying unto them,
+ Come up hither. And they ascended up to heaven in a cloud; and
+ their enemies beheld them.
+
+At the expiration of the twelve hundred and sixty years the scene
+changes. The prophecy of the witnesses in their sackcloth state, hidden
+away from sight in the wilderness, ends, and they are now brought out
+into public view--but only to be killed. Their slaughter takes place at
+the hands of the beast. When we come to consider chapter XIII, we shall
+see that the Papacy is described as a beast reigning for forty-two
+months, or twelve hundred and sixty years, after which time another
+beast possessing great power and authority appears on the scene. This
+second beast is Protestantism, and through it the murder of the two
+witnesses at the close of the Papal supremacy in the vision before us
+was effected.
+
+It would seem, by the similarity of statement that the beast "ascendeth
+out of the bottomless pit," that the slaughter of the witnesses was
+effected by the Papal beast (chap. 17:7, 8); but the Mohammedan delusion
+also is said to have proceeded from "the bottomless pit." Chap. 9:1, 2.
+The expression _bottomless pit_ is doubtless used merely to signify the
+source of certain powers in contradistinction to the heavenly source
+from which others proceeded. Although the Papal beast is said to have
+originated in the bottomless pit, the second beast also doubtless
+proceeded from the same source, for he possessed many of the
+characteristics of the former, and caused the earth to worship the first
+beast, as explained in chapter 13. That he was not of heavenly origin is
+shown by the statement that he came up "out of the earth." Chap. 13:11.
+But the direct proof that it was the Protestant beast, and not the Papal
+beast--although the same expression as to its origin is used concerning
+it--that slew the two witnesses, is found in the fact that the reign of
+the first, or Papal, beast was limited to forty two months (chap. 13:5),
+corresponding to the twelve hundred and sixty years in which the
+witnesses prophesied in the vision before us; while it was after the
+_close_ of this period, at the time when the second, or Protestant,
+beast arose (chap. 13:11), that the witnesses were slain.
+
+To many this may seem a hard saying; but I request that the matter be
+given the most careful attention in the light of prophecy and divine
+truth. It is true that the Sixteenth Century Reformation at first
+brought the witnesses out of the wilderness of seclusion where they had
+remained during the long night of Romanism and exhibited them to the
+public view; but when thus placed upon exhibition, they were soon robbed
+entirely of their position as the Vicars, or Governors, of God's church.
+Since creed and sect-making first began, the Word and Spirit have not
+possesed governing power and authority in Protestantism; but men have
+usurped that place and prescribed authoritative rules of faith and
+practise for the people. The principles of Higher Criticism have so far
+pervaded the realm of sectarian theology that a vast number of the
+clergy no longer regard the Bible as the inspired word of God to man,
+but simply as a remarkable piece of religious literature recording the
+natural development of the religious consciousness among a peculiarly
+sensitive race of people. Protestantism certainly has placed the Bible
+on the dissecting table and dismembered it in a manner wholly unknown
+before. While Protestants will not for a moment allow the blessed Book
+to be hidden out of sight--put "into graves"--still they will not grant
+it that place it should occupy as the sole discipline of faith, so it is
+a dead letter to them. That all-glorious doctrine of Bible _unity_,
+which fills the whole New Testament, strikes a deathblow to all the
+carnal divisions and institutions of sectarianism; and so with one
+accord they unite in _fighting it_. "Oh, the good old blessed Bible! we
+could not do without it," say they; yet, as everybody knows, they are
+governed by the discipline and laws that they or their representatives
+have formulated. Thus, the Word and Spirit of God are brought under the
+public gaze, only to be treated with such indignity in God's sight, and
+killed; while infidels look on, and tauntingly remark, "Either the
+religion of to-day is no Christianity, or the Word of God is a lie."
+
+In the beginning of this dispensation the church of God not only
+consisted of all those who were spiritual, but constituted a visible,
+organic body as well, made up of numerous local congregations that were
+separate in the management of their internal affairs, yet interrelated
+with each other, and were directed by humble pastors, who were, in
+reference to each other, _equal_. The Word of God was their only
+discipline, and the Spirit of God, their great Teacher and Guide. Thus,
+the two witnesses were active in their official position, in the public
+view, as the Vicars or Governors of the church of God on earth. When,
+however, men usurped the place of these Vicars by ignoring the Spirit
+and rejecting the Word and making their own rules of faith, the effect
+was a national hierarchy--the church of Rome, which for twelve hundred
+and sixty years stood in the public view. Yet the two witnesses were
+still alive, though driven into obscurity and "clothed in sackcloth";
+for they still acted in their official position in the congregations of
+the medieval Christians already referred to, who resisted the doctrines
+of men and clung tenaciously to the simple, primitive form of church
+government and allowed the Spirit and Word authority supreme.
+
+But during the Protestant era Christians the world over became
+identified with the various sects, hence were representing to the world
+the beast power instead of the true church. Thus, during the Protestant
+period, the church of God, _in its organic form_, was not represented
+anywhere on earth; for its members were scattered among those who were
+"worshiping the beast and his image." Hence the two witnesses, during
+this era, had no place to operate in their official capacity as the
+Governors of God's church and are therefore represented as slain. The
+government of Protestant sects is not effected by the Word and Spirit;
+for the institutions themselves are of human origin, and men are their
+law-makers and governors.
+
+When the two witnesses are deprived of their governing power and the
+rules and disciplines of men substituted in their place, a decline into
+worldliness is the invariable result. This has been the case repeatedly
+in sectarianism. In fact, Protestantism, as a component part of that
+great city Babylon, has so given herself over to "revellings,
+banquetings, and abominable idolatries," that a voice from heaven has
+declared her to be "the habitation of devils, and the hold of every foul
+spirit, and a cage of every unclean and hateful bird." Chap. 18:2.
+Witness the shows, festivals, frolics, grab-bag parties, kissing bees,
+cake-walk lotteries, and other abominations unnumbered, that are carried
+on without shame, under the guise of religion, in the high places of
+this modern Babylon! If the Word of God with the full power and
+authority of his Spirit could be turned in upon them, it would be like
+the torment of fire; but no, it is dead to them, and they rejoice and
+make merry and continue in "the same excess of riot."
+
+In the description before us, this city of sectarianism in which the two
+witnesses are slain is "spiritually [or mystically] called Sodom and
+Egypt, where also our Lord was crucified." It is a mystical Sodom, Egypt
+and Jerusalem--a Sodom for wickedness and lewdness, an Egypt for the
+captivity and oppression of God's people, and a Jerusalem for the
+crucifying of the Son of God afresh and putting him to an open shame.
+Thus, this city mystically combines the wickedness of the three most
+wicked places on earth--Sodom, Egypt, and Jerusalem. These facts we
+shall notice more particularly hereafter.
+
+But these two witnesses were not always to remain trampled under foot in
+the streets of great Babylon; for a time came when "the spirit of life
+from God entered into them, and they stood upon their feet; and great
+fear fell upon them which saw them." In this is portrayed the
+reformation which is now taking place in the world. About the year A.D.
+1880 God began to raise up holy men and women whom he commissioned to
+preach the everlasting gospel of the kingdom again; and they went forth
+in his name calling upon God's people everywhere to come "out of all
+places where they had been scattered in the cloudy and dark day" (Ezek.
+34:12) and to take up their abode in the one true church of Jesus
+Christ, his body, independent of all sectarianism and the creeds and
+disciplines of men. In this assembly of the faithful, gathered out of
+all nations, no man nor set of men attempts to form laws or regulations
+for the supervision of spiritual affairs; but with one consent they
+humbly bow before the only true Lawgiver (Jas. 4:12), and say, "The
+government shall be upon his shoulder" (Isa. 9:6); and the Word and
+Spirit of God have perfect control of his saints. Halleluiah! They can
+preach, teach, and believe every word of truth placed in the Sacred
+Volume, without a conference or discipline of men forbidding. Standing
+upon this apostolic platform of eternal truth, they hurl the thunders of
+divine judgment against the hidden works of darkness, causing the
+graceless devotees of fallen Babylon to quake with fear and to "gnaw
+their tongues for pain."
+
+After the resurrection of these witnesses, a voice from heaven is heard,
+saying, "Come up hither. And they ascended up to heaven in a cloud; and
+their enemies beheld them." This ascension to heaven in the presence of
+their enemies, which according to this chapter occurred before the end
+of time, has reference undoubtedly to their great exaltation. "Thy
+greatness is grown, and _reacheth unto heaven_." Dan. 4:22. We see that
+in this text a similar expression signifies great exaltation. So this
+work is destined to assume such proportions that the people of earth may
+have the privilege of seeing the truth. In the preceding chapter John,
+as a symbol of the church at this time, under the living ministry
+symbolized by the rain-bow angel, was told that he "must prophesy again
+before many peoples, and nations, and tongues, and kings." Verse 11.
+
+The signification of the time-period of three days and a half claims our
+attention next. According to the foregoing explanation, it will be seen
+that the writer applies it as three centuries and a half, or three
+hundred and fifty years--from A.D. 1530 to A.D. 1880. It will be
+necessary to adduce strong reasons for thus applying it. In the first
+place, the time-prophecies of the Bible are by no means confined to the
+year-day manner of interpretation. Many times in the Old Testament the
+expression occurs, "And it shall come to pass _in that day_," which
+expression is admitted by all to have reference to the gospel day, or
+the entire gospel dispensation. When the church of Philadelphia was
+promised deliverance from the _hour_ of temptation which was to come
+upon all the world (chap. 3:10), no one supposes that a short period of
+only one week is specified. The rulers of the ten kingdoms were to
+"receive power as kings _one hour_ with the beast" (chap. 17:12), which
+expression will be shown later to really cover many years. We might
+point out many such exceptions were it necessary.
+
+Again, it was the beast that came up at the expiration of the twelve
+hundred and sixty years, or Protestantism, that slaughtered the
+witnesses, and we could not expect their resurrection during the reign
+of Protestantism, which every one will admit was longer than three and
+one-half years, according to the year-day application. The events as
+they have developed prove that it was just three and one-half centuries
+before Protestantism was entirely ignored and the Spirit and Word
+recognized as the sole Governors in the church of God. Besides, the
+general trend of events following the formation of Protestantism
+naturally divide the succeeding centuries into separate periods. The
+first (sixteenth) was a fierce conflict for the establishment of
+Protestantism; the second (seventeenth) was a violent reaction, wherein
+the church of Rome nearly triumphed over her hated opposers; while the
+third (eighteenth) is specially noted in history as the period of
+infidelity or reason. This division of time was so noticable that
+D'Aubigne, who wrote about A.D. 1835, in his famous History of the
+Reformation, refers to it in the following remarkable language: "It has
+been said that the three last centuries, the sixteenth, the seventeenth,
+and the eighteenth, may be conceived as an immense battle of _three
+days'_ duration. We willingly adopt this beautiful comparison.... The
+first day was the battle of God, the second the battle of the priest,
+the third the battle of Reason. What will be the fourth? [1830-1930] In
+our opinion, the confused strife, the deadly contest of all these powers
+together, TO END IN THE VICTORY OF HIM TO WHOM TRIUMPH BELONGS." Book
+XI, Chap. 9.
+
+The writer is thankful to God that he is permitted to see the fourth day
+ending "in the victory of Him to whom triumph belongs." And may we, my
+brethren, be grateful to our dear Lord that it is our privilege to have
+part in this glorious reformation of divine truth that is now sweeping
+over the world and gathering the elect together for the soon-coming of
+the Savior.
+
+ 13. And the same hour was there a great earthquake, and the
+ tenth part of the city fell, and in the earthquake were slain of
+ men seven thousand: and the remnant were affrighted, and gave
+ glory to the God of heaven.
+
+ 14. The second woe is past; and, behold, the third woe cometh
+ quickly.
+
+At the time the witnesses reach their greatest exaltation, a great
+earthquake takes place upon earth, and the tenth part of the city falls.
+The nature of the symbol would point us to some political upheaval.
+Since the great city of Babylon is composed of different divisions (as
+will be seen hereafter), it is a matter of doubt as to which part of the
+city is here referred to; but most probably that of the hierarchy as
+embraced in one of the ten divisions or kingdoms. Since the fulfilment
+of this prediction is yet future, I speak with hesitation and wait for
+the event to make all clear. It is probable, however, that either in
+this political revolution, or about that time, the Ottoman power will be
+overthrown; for immediately the announcement is made, "The second woe is
+past; and, behold, the third woe cometh quickly."
+
+ 15. And the seventh angel sounded; and there were great voices
+ in heaven, saying, The kingdoms of this world are become the
+ kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign for
+ ever and ever.
+
+ 16. And the four and twenty elders, which sat before God on
+ their seats, fell upon their faces, and worshipped God,
+
+ 17. Saying, We give thee thanks, O Lord God Almighty, which art,
+ and wast, and art to come; because thou hast taken to thee thy
+ great power, and hast reigned.
+
+ 18. And the nations were angry, and thy wrath is come, and the
+ time of the dead, that they should be judged, and that thou
+ shouldest give reward unto thy servants the prophets, and to the
+ saints, and them that fear thy name, small and great; and
+ shouldest destroy them which destroy the earth.
+
+ 19. And the temple of God was opened in heaven, and there was
+ seen in his temple the ark of his testament: and there were
+ lightnings, and voices, and thunderings, and an earthquake, and
+ great hail.
+
+The seventh angel that here sounded is the third woe-angel, and
+according to the description before us, ushers in the general judgment.
+When the temple of God was opened that this mighty event might take
+place on earth, there were "lightnings, and voices, and thunderings, and
+an earthquake, and great hail." Wondrous commotions took place in the
+world, for kingdoms and empires were all overthrown, and Jesus Christ
+was the only king remaining, and his mission was to raise the dead that
+they might be judged, to give reward to the prophets and saints, and to
+banish with everlasting destruction those that corrupted the earth. The
+description itself is too plain to need further comment.
+
+"The temple of God" that was opened in heaven is to be understood as
+symbolical (as explained in chap. 6:9), and not literal. In other words,
+the heavenly world appeared to John symbolized after the sanctuary of
+the temple on earth. Chap. 15:5-8; 16:1, 7, 17, etc. This is proved
+clearly by the fact that, when the real heaven, the future home of the
+redeemed, is described, John says, "I saw _no temple_ therein." Chap.
+21:22.
+
+Before dismissing the visions of this chapter, I wish to call attention
+to one more point hitherto referred to--that of parallelism and
+contrast. While we have the history of the church apostate described by
+the treading down of the holy city, we have also, in immediate contrast
+and running parallel therewith, a history of the true church existing
+during the same period of twelve hundred and sixty years, although it
+was in a sackcloth state. And while the reign of Protestantism is
+described as a period during which the two witnesses were in one sense
+dead, we have in immediate contrast a history of the last great
+reformation, in which the spirit of life from God again enters these
+same witnesses, and they stand upright on their feet, to the
+consternation of all their adversaries. Amen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+ And there appeared a great wonder in heaven; a woman clothed
+ with the sun, and the moon under her feet, and upon her head a
+ crown of twelve stars:
+
+ 2. And she being with child cried, travailing in birth, and
+ pained to be delivered.
+
+ 3. And there appeared another wonder in heaven; and behold a
+ great red dragon, having seven heads and ten horns, and seven
+ crowns upon his heads.
+
+ 4. And his tail drew the third part of the stars of Heaven, and
+ did cast them to the earth: and the dragon stood before the
+ woman which was ready to be delivered, for to devour her child
+ as soon as it was born.
+
+ 5. And she brought forth a man child, who was to rule all
+ nations with a rod of iron: and her child was caught up unto
+ God, and to his throne.
+
+ 6. And the woman fled into the wilderness, where she hath a
+ place prepared of God, that they should feed her there a
+ thousand two hundred and threescore days.
+
+The three principal objects of this vision are the woman clothed with
+the sun, the man-child born of her, and a red dragon with seven heads
+and ten horns. These, being drawn from nature and human life, would
+point us both to the church and to the state for their fulfilment. The
+symbols, also, are living agents, and we should expect the objects they
+represent to be such.
+
+This woman is an appropriate symbol of the church of God, which is
+composed of living, intelligent beings; and that it is the true and not
+an apostate one, is shown by the fact that upon her flight into the
+wilderness she had a place prepared of God where she was nourished for
+twelve hundred and sixty days. In a subsequent portion of the Apocalypse
+a vile harlot is taken as the representative of the church apostate. In
+this way a proper correspondence of character and quality is kept up.
+This woman appeared, not in the temple above, but in the firmament of
+heaven, where she was clothed with the sun, the moon under her feet, and
+upon her head a crown of twelve stars. Thus the brightest luminaries of
+heaven were gathered around her. Arrayed in this splendid manner, she is
+easily distinguished from an apostate church, which would not be so
+highly favored with such attire in this exalted position. Doubtless the
+objects with which she is adorned have some special signification. The
+moon is a fit symbol of the old covenant, above which the church had
+just risen, only to be clothed in the superior brightness and glory of
+the new covenant. And as the moon shines only with a borrowed light,
+obtaining its illumination from the sun; so, also, the old covenant was
+only a shadow of the good things to come and now stands eclipsed in the
+brightness and transcendant glory of that new and better dispensation.
+According to the explanation given of the seven stars in the right hand
+of Jesus (chap. 1:19), we are authorized to regard stars as a symbol of
+Christian ministers, and the twelve that appear most prominently in the
+first history of the church are the twelve apostles of the Lamb.
+
+The dragon, a beast from the natural world, would properly symbolize a
+tyrannical, persecuting government. This was a red dragon with seven
+heads and ten horns, and seven crowns upon his heads. In the following
+chapter we read that John saw a beast rising up out of the sea with the
+same number of heads and horns, but ten crowns on his horns. And the
+dragon gave him (the beast) "his power, and his seat, and great
+authority." Verse 2. So far as the heads and horns are concerned, the
+only difference between the two is that the crowns--a symbol of supreme
+authority and power--have been transferred from the heads to the horns.
+In chapter 17 John saw the same beast again and there received the
+following explanation of the seven heads: "And there are seven kings:
+five are fallen, and one is, and the other is not yet come; and when he
+cometh he must continue a short space." Verse 10. Concerning the horns
+he was told, "The ten horns which thou sawest are ten kings, which have
+received no kingdom as yet." Verse 12. With this explanation before us
+it will be easy to identify the dragon of chapter 12 and the beast of
+chapters 13 and 17 as the Roman empire, the first under the Pagan and
+the second under the Papal form. The seven heads signify the seven
+distinct forms of supreme government that ruled successively in the
+empire. The five that had already fallen when John received the vision
+were the Regal power, the Consular, the Decemvirate, the Military
+Tribunes and the Triumvirate. "One is"--the Imperial.[8] The
+identification of its seventh and last head we shall leave until later.
+The ten horns, or kingdoms, which had not yet arisen when the Revelation
+was given, were the ten minor kingdoms that grew out of the Western
+Roman empire during its decline and fall. The historian Machiard, in
+giving an account of these nations, and without any reference to the
+Bible or its prophecies, reckons ten kingdoms, as follows:
+
+1. The Ostrogoths in Maesia;
+2. The Visigoths in Pannonia;
+3. Sueves and Alans in Gascoigne and Spain;
+4. Vandals in Africa;
+5. Franks in France;
+6. Burgundians in Burgundy;
+7. Heruli and Turings in Italy;
+8. Saxons and Anglis in Britain;
+9. Huns in Hungary;
+10. Lombards, at first on the Danube, and afterwards
+in Italy.
+
+[Footnote 8: The fact that commentators and historians differ in their
+enumeration of the forms of government that ruled in Rome is often a
+source of confusion to ordinary readers. Hence an explanation is
+necessary. Rome was first ruled by kings, and therefore the first form
+of government is designated by either the term _Kings_ or the term
+_Regal Power_. Upon the expulsion of the kings and the formation of the
+republic, the royal power was entrusted to two men who held it for a
+year, and were called _consuls_. In times of great public danger the
+consuls were superseded by a special officer called a _dictator_, who
+had supreme power. As the early life of the republic was often
+threatened with grave dangers, Rome was often governed by a dictator;
+hence this form of government is sometimes called the Dictatorship. The
+third form was the _Decemviri_, a government by ten men, who compiled
+the twelve famous Tables of Laws. In 444 B.C. another change was made by
+the appointment of _Military Tribunes_ (whose numbers varied) with
+consular power. These were frequently called _Consuls_. The fifth form
+was the _Triumvirate_, a government by three men. The sixth was the
+_Imperial_. Hence the different forms can be enumerated thus: 1. The
+Regal Power, or Kings. 2. Consula or Dictators. 3. Decemvirate. 4.
+Military Tribunes, Tribunes, or Consuls. 5. Triumvirate. 6. Imperial.
+The seventh form will be considered in another place. See remarks on
+chap. 17:7-11.]
+
+Other historians agree substantially with this. These kingdoms all arose
+within one hundred and seventy years. The dragon is described with the
+horns, although they were not now in existence and did not arise until
+nearly the time when the dragon became the beast; likewise, he is
+represented with seven heads, although he really possessed only one head
+at a time, and five had already fallen and one being yet to come. He is
+described with all the heads and horns he ever had or was to have.
+
+The tail of this dragon "drew the third part of the stars of heaven, and
+did cast them to the earth." Some people who have never learned the
+nature of symbolic language try to imagine such a literal creature as
+the one here described and picture in their minds what an awful thing it
+would be to see the third part of the stars falling to the earth. But
+real stars that are fixed or planetary never fall, and if they did, they
+would be as apt to fall in an opposite direction as toward the earth.
+Besides, if one should come tumbling down here, it would knock this
+world into oblivion. But with a knowledge of the proper use of symbols
+we can easily identify this dragon with the Roman empire under its Pagan
+form; and the casting down of the stars, which were doubtless used as
+symbols of ministers as in verse 1, signifies the warfare which this
+awful beast power waged against the church of God, in which her
+ministers were always a shining mark for the first persecution and
+suffered terribly for the cause they represented.
+
+The man-child is the next object that claims our attention. Some have
+supposed that it represented Jesus Christ in his first advent to the
+world. But this could not be; for Christ is never represented as being
+the offspring of the church, but, on the other hand, is declared to be
+its originator. Some, also, have supposed that it represented the church
+bringing forth Christ to the world in a spiritual sense. This, however,
+would be in direct conflict with the known laws of symbolic language. A
+visible, living, intelligent agent, such as this man-child evidently
+was, could not be the symbol of an invisible spiritual presence.
+Besides, it has been clearly shown that Christ always appears in his own
+person, unrepresented by another, from the fact that he can not be
+symbolized. It is clear that this child can not signify a single
+definite personage; for after he is caught up to God, there is still a
+remnant of the woman's seed left upon earth. See verse 17.
+
+What, then, does the man-child signify? It symbolizes the mighty host of
+new converts or children that the early church by her earnest travail
+brought forth. The seeming incongruity that the church, or mother, and
+her children are alike only serves to establish the point in question
+when rightly understood. A child is of the same substance as its mother
+and is designed to perpetuate the race. So, also, the new-born babes in
+the church are just the same spiritually as those who are older, and are
+intended to perpetuate the church of God on earth. But this explanation
+of itself is not sufficient to entirely satisfy an inquiring mind, and
+the question is sure to be asked, Why was it necessary that the church
+of God in this dispensation should be represented by two individuals--a
+woman and her son? I also will ask a question--Why, on the other hand,
+was it necessary that the great apostasy of this dispensation should be
+represented by the double-figure of a woman and her daughters? The
+answer to the latter question would readily be given--to symbolize two
+distinct phases of apostasy. So, also, it was necessary that a
+double-symbol, such as a woman and her son, should be chosen to set
+forth _two phases_ of the church brought to view in this chapter. If but
+a single symbol were used, how could the church be thereby represented
+as continuing on earth and fleeing into the wilderness and at the same
+time be represented as "overcome," persecuted to the death, and "caught
+up unto God and to his throne"? This double-phase of the church--the
+experience of the saints on earth and the reign of the martyrs in
+Paradise--will be made very clear to the reader hereafter. But it would
+be impossible to set forth these two phases under one symbol, and
+therefore two are chosen.
+
+There is also direct Scripture testimony on this point. "Before she
+travailed, she brought forth; before her pain came, she was delivered of
+a _man-child._ Who hath heard such a thing? who hath seen such things?
+Shall the earth be made to bring forth in one day? or shall a nation be
+born at once? For as soon as Zion travailed, she brought forth her
+children." Isa. 66:7, 8. According to Heb. 12:22, 23, this Zion, or
+Sion, referred to is the New Testament church, and the man-child that
+she is said to bring forth is interpreted by Isaiah as "a nation born at
+once." Such language perfectly describes the rapid increase in the
+Christian church on Pentecost and shortly afterward, when thousands were
+added in one day. According to the apostle Paul, the host of Jews and
+Gentiles reconciled unto God through Jesus Christ constituted "one new
+man" in Christ. Eph. 2:15. See also Gal. 3:28. R.V. This man-child was
+to rule all nations with a rod of iron. For an explanation of this rule
+see remarks on chapter 2:26, 27. The twelve hundred and sixty days will
+be referred to later.
+
+ 7. And there was war in heaven: Michael and his angels fought
+ against the dragon; and the dragon fought and his angels,
+
+ 8. And prevailed not; neither was their place found any more in
+ heaven.
+
+ 9. And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called
+ the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: he was
+ cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him.
+
+ 10. And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven, Now is come
+ salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the
+ power of his Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast
+ down, which accused them before our God day and night.
+
+ 11. And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the
+ word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives unto the
+ death.
+
+ 12. Therefore rejoice, ye heavens, and ye that dwell in them.
+ Woe to the inhabiters of the earth and of the sea! for the devil
+ is come down unto you, having great wrath, because he knoweth
+ that he hath but a short time.
+
+ 13. And when the dragon saw that he was cast unto the earth, he
+ persecuted the woman which brought forth the man child.
+
+ 14. And to the woman were given two wings of a great eagle, that
+ she might fly into the wilderness, into her place, where she is
+ nourished for a time, and times, and half a time, from the face
+ of the serpent.
+
+ 15. And the serpent cast out of his mouth water as a flood after
+ the woman, that he might cause her to be carried away of the
+ flood.
+
+ 16. And the earth helped the woman, and the earth opened her
+ mouth, and swallowed up the flood which the dragon east out of
+ his mouth.
+
+ 17. And the dragon was wroth with the woman, and went to make
+ war with the remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of
+ God, and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.
+
+In this vision we have a series of events covering exactly the same
+period of time as that of the preceeding one; namely, a history of the
+church up to and including her flight into the wilderness, and of the
+same opposing dragon. In this description, however, the events are more
+perfectly detailed.
+
+Because this dragon was called the Devil and Satan, many have been led
+into the idea that it signified the Prince of darkness himself. But
+surely we could not suppose that Beelzebub has any such appearance as
+this dragon. The foregoing explanation concerning his heads and horns
+shows conclusively that the Pagan Roman empire is meant, and not
+Beelzebub. Why, then, was it called the Devil and Satan? Among the
+Hebrews the term _Satan_ was frequently used in a very liberal sense and
+applied to different objects, signifying merely an adversary or opposer.
+According to Young's Analytical Concordance the Hebrew word for Satan is
+translated _adversary_ in a number of texts, a few of which I will refer
+to. Num. 22:22: "And the angel of the Lord stood in the way for an
+_adversary_ [Satan, Heb.] against him." Here an angel of the Lord is
+called a Satan to Balaam. In 1 Sam. 29:4 David is called an adversary
+(Heb. Satan) to the Philistines. In 2 Sam. 19:22 certain opposers are
+said to be adversaries (Satans, Heb.) unto David; while in 1 Kings 11:25
+a certain man was said to be an adversary (Satan) to Israel all the days
+of Solomon. A number of other instances could be given if necessary. In
+the New Testament, also, the term _Satan_ is sometimes used to signify
+merely an opposer. "But he turned, and said unto Peter, Get thee behind
+me, Satan." Mat. 16:23. In 1 Cor. 10:20 Paul declares "that the things
+which the Gentiles sacrifice, they sacrifice to _devils_." Paganism
+stood as the great opposer of Christianity, hence was a Satan
+(adversary) unto it; while the apostle denominated its religious rites
+as devil-worship. I do not question the fact that the spirit of
+Beelzebub was manifested in the thing; but the dragon itself was the
+empire, as is proved by the heads and the horns. However, the Devil and
+the agency through which he works are often used interchangeably. Satan
+and the serpent in Eden stand in the same relation as do Satan, or
+Beelzebub, and Paganism in the New Testament; hence to bind Paganism was
+to bind the Devil and Satan in one important sense.
+
+The dragon would be a beast from the natural world (if such a creature
+actually existed) and as such could represent nothing more than a civil
+empire; but in the vision under consideration he is represented as
+accompanied by _angels_ actuated by his spirit and defending his cause.
+By this combination of symbols is set forth the politico-religious
+system of the empire--a religion that denied the doctrine of the one
+exclusive God and the divinity of Jesus Christ. It was the religion of
+_infidelity_. It was the dragon as a false religious system that
+Christianity attacked, and not the State itself. The following quotation
+from Butler's Ecclesiastical History will show the relation of
+Christians to the empire:
+
+"The Romans were accustomed to tolerate all new religions if they took
+their place by the side of those already existing, and if they did not
+cast reproach upon them.... But Christianity, by its very nature
+exclusive in its claims ... was offensive to the Romans and to the
+State. A religion which cast contempt upon the religions and rites
+sanctioned by the laws, and endeavored to draw men away from them,
+seemed to express thereby contempt and hostility for the State itself.
+Hence Christianity was branded as a malignant superstition, and
+Christians spoken of as the enemies of the human race.... From the
+letter of Pliny to Trajan, it was evidently recorded as an _religio
+illicita_, and the mere fact of being a Christian was counted of itself
+a crime.... The exclusiveness of Christianity seemed also to place its
+disciples in a position of direct disloyalty to the emperors and the
+State. 'The emperor was ex-officio _Pontifex Maximus_; the gods were
+national. Cicero declares as a principle of legislation, that no one
+should be allowed to worship foreign gods, unless they were recognized
+by public statute. Maecenas thus counselled Augustas: Honor the gods
+according to the customs of your ancestors, and compel others to worship
+them. Hate and punish those who bring in strange gods.' As the Roman
+empire was founded on the absolutism of the State, and made nothing of
+personal rights, Christianity, which first taught and acknowledged them,
+would be peculiarly offensive to the State. Moreover, the conscientious
+refusal of Christians to pay divine honor to the emperor and his
+statutes, and to take part in idolatrous ceremonies at public festivals
+... and their constant assembling themselves together, brought them
+under the suspicion and obloquy of the emperors and the people." Pp. 49,
+50.
+
+The dragon was stationed in the same heaven where the woman appeared.
+This signifies his exalted position in the world. While the dragon was
+in the height of his power and glory, Michael (Jesus Christ--Jude 9; 1
+Thes. 4:16; John 5:28) and his followers appeared on the scene, and a
+fierce battle for supremacy ensued, resulting in the final victory of
+the hosts of Michael. That it was against the dragon as a religious
+system that the Christians fought is proved by the kind of weapons they
+employed. "And they overcame him by the _blood of the Lamb_ and by the
+_word of their testimony_; and they loved not their lives unto the
+death." Christianity never sought to overturn the civil empire, but did
+with all the power of truth oppose the huge system of error sustained by
+it and gained such decisive victories that the cry was heard, "Now is
+come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power
+of his Christ; for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which
+accused them before our God day and night." The Devil himself suffered a
+severe defeat when his favorite agents, the dragon and his followers,
+were cast down from their lofty position and Christianity was exalted
+instead. Says Butler: "The final victory of Christianity over heathenism
+and Judaism, and the mightiest empire of the ancient world, a victory
+gained without physical force, by the moral power of faith and
+perseverance, of faith and love, is one of the sublimest spectacles of
+history, and one of the strongest evidences of the divinity and
+indestructible life of our holy religion." P. 40.
+
+But the fact that many Christians lost their lives in this conflict
+(verse 11), insomuch that the man-child is represented as being caught
+up unto God (verse 5), shows that the dragon employed also the arm of
+civil power in his opposition to the growing truth. The rapid increase
+of Christianity, despite the violent opposition and persecution of the
+Pagan party, can be no better represented than by a quotation from the
+notable Apology of Tertullian, who wrote during the persecution by
+Septimus Severus, about the end of the second century.
+
+"Rulers of the Roman Empire," he begins, "you surely can not forbid the
+Truth to reach you by the secret pathway of a noiseless book. She knows
+that she is but a sojourner on the earth, and as a stranger finds
+enemies; and more, her origin, her dwelling-place, her hope, her
+rewards, her honors, are above. One thing, meanwhile, she anxiously
+desires of earthly rulers--not to be condemned unknown. What harm can it
+do to give her a hearing?... The outcry is that the State is filled with
+Christians; that they are in the fields, in the citadels, in the
+islands. The lament is, as for some calamity, that both sexes, every age
+and condition, even high rank, are passing over to the Christian faith.
+
+"The outcry is a confession and an argument for our cause; for we are a
+people of yesterday, and yet we have filled every place belonging to
+you--cities, islands, castles, towns, assemblies, your very camp, your
+tribes, companies, palace, senate, forum. We leave to you your temples
+alone. We can count your armies: our numbers in a single province will
+be greater. We have it in our power, without arms and without rebellion,
+to fight against you with the weapon of a simple divorce. We can leave
+you to wage your wars alone. If such a multitude should withdraw into
+some remote corner of the world you would doubtless tremble at your own
+solitude, and ask, 'Of whom are we the governors?'
+
+"It is a human right that every man should worship according to his own
+convictions ... a forced religion is no religion at all.... Men say that
+the Christians are the cause of every public disaster. If the Tiber
+rises as high as the city walls, if the Nile does not rise over the
+fields, if the heavens give no rain, if there be an earthquake, if a
+famine or pestilence, straightway they cry, Away with the Christians to
+the lion.... But go zealously on, ye good governors, you will stand
+higher with the people if you kill us, torture us, condemn us, grind us
+to the dust; your injustice is the proof that we are innocent. God
+permits us to suffer. Your cruelty avails you nothing.... The oftener
+you mow us down the more in number we grow; the blood of Christians is
+seed. What you call our obstinacy is an instructor. For who that sees it
+does not inquire for what we suffer? Who that inquires does not embrace
+our doctrines? Who that embraces them is not ready to give his blood for
+the fulness of God's grace?"
+
+Another writer has said: "The church in this period appears poor in
+earthly possessions and honors, but rich in heavenly grace, in
+world-conquering faith and love and hope; unpopular, even outlawed,
+hated and persecuted, yet far more vigorous and expansive than the
+philosophies of Greece, or the empire of Rome; composed chiefly of
+persons of the lower social ranks, yet attracting the noblest and
+deepest minds of the age, and bearing in her bosom the hope of the
+world; conquering by apparent defeat and growing on the blood of her
+martyrs; great in deeds, greater in sufferings, greatest in death for
+the honor of Christ and the benefit of generations to come."
+
+This triumph of early Christianity over Paganism was a theme worthy of
+the song. "Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our
+God, and the power of his Christ." Even before the death of the
+apostles, according to the younger Pliny, the temples of the gods in
+Asia Minor were almost forsaken. No wonder, then, that even the
+inhabitants of heaven were called upon to rejoice at so great a victory
+attained by the followers of the Lamb. But the same voice also says,
+"Woe to the inhabiters of the earth and of the sea! for the devil is
+come down unto you, having great wrath, because he knoweth that he hath
+but a short time." This represents the violence of the Pagan party upon
+its defeat, being exasperated to the exercise of greater opposition and
+cruelty wherever the means and the power were still in their hands. Cast
+down from his exalted position in the heavens--the religious sphere--his
+ecclesiastical prestige lost, he had no place to abide but in the
+earth--the political kingdom--whence he took up arms, and "woe to the
+inhabitants of the earth." But "the days of Paganism in the empire were
+numbered." The Devil knew that he had but a short time, therefore he
+came down in great wrath. This is in accordance with the facts of
+history. Paganism did not die an easy death, but struggled hard and
+long.
+
+When cast from his high position, however, the dragon "persecuted the
+woman which brought forth the man-child." The true idea expressed in the
+original is that he _pursued_ the woman, and this signification is
+indicated by what follows--"To the woman were given two wings of a great
+eagle, that she might fly into the wilderness, into her place, where she
+is nourished for a time, and times, and half a time, from the face of
+the serpent." The _time_ as a definite period signifies one year; hence
+a time, times, and half a time would be three and one-half years, or
+twelve hundred and sixty days, as before explained. There is an apparent
+incongruity or contradiction of statement in reference to the symbols
+here; but it is a contradiction that when rightly understood throws
+light upon the whole subject. It will be noticed that the woman and
+Michael with his angels symbolize the same object--the people of God.
+Under the latter figure they were triumphant and the dragon was
+defeated. Yet after he was cast down, he turned upon the woman and
+pursued her, and thus, the church appeared to be the defeated party.
+According to this, then, the Pagan party is represented as _prevailing_
+soon after he met _defeat_ and the church apparently _defeated_ soon
+after her period of _triumph_. Here again we have two separate symbols
+of the same object in order to represent two of its different phases.
+
+This is explained satisfactorily by noticing carefully the facts. The
+woman, who is always the true church composed of holy people, was at
+first identical with the visible church, or the great body of
+Christians, and in this condition was successful in spreading the pure
+gospel and casting down the powers of iniquity symbolized by the dragon.
+But the dragon politically, as symbolized by his being a beast from the
+natural world, with heads and horns, remained in power for some time,
+his religious prestige only being lost. Christianity did not attempt to
+cast down the dragon in the sense of destroying the civil empire. As is
+well known, a great spiritual declension followed the period of the
+church's greatest triumph, which decline drove the woman, or the true
+church, into the wilderness; hence to all appearances the church became
+a defeated party. About this same time, the dying cause of Paganism
+revived for a season in terrible severity in the latter part of the
+third century; hence to all appearances the dragon was triumphant. This
+supreme effort of Paganism's to regain its former position will be
+better understood in connection with what follows regarding the flood
+which he cast out of his mouth. But that the dragon was not permanently
+triumphant is shown by the fact that he afterwards resigned his power
+and position unto the beast. Chap. 13:2.
+
+As to the meaning of the "two wings of a great eagle" given the woman to
+aid her in her flight, I am not able to say positively. Some apply them
+to "the grace and providence of God which watched over the church";
+others to the "spiritual gifts of faith, love," etc., which, like
+supporting wings, bore the church above her enemies. But I can not see
+how the wings of a great eagle can properly symbolize such things. They
+are not drawn from the right source. Perhaps nothing more is intended by
+the wings than to denote the fact of her successful flight. That this
+idea is the correct one seems quite clear when we consider the fact that
+the remarkable deliverance of the Israelites from Egyptian bondage is
+set forth under the same figure, that of eagles' wings. "Ye have seen
+what I did unto the Egyptians, and how _I bare you on eagles' wings_,
+and brought you unto myself." Ex. 19:4. With the wings of such a
+powerful bird she was able to escape, so that the dragon could not
+overtake her.
+
+"And the serpent cast out of his mouth water as a flood after the woman,
+that he might cause her to be carried away of the flood. And the earth
+helped the woman, and the earth opened her mouth, and swallowed up the
+flood which the dragon cast out of his mouth." Here is a peculiar
+combination of symbols from different departments--the serpent, a flood
+of water, the woman, and the earth. The last two as allies is a very
+unusual circumstance. Some refer the flood of waters to heresies that
+arose in, or was connected with, the hierarchy about this time; but in
+that case how could it be said that it was the serpent that cast it out?
+Others apply it to errors that the Pagan party introduced baptized with
+the name of Christianity, when they professed to become converts at a
+later period. It is certainly an appropriate _figure of speech_ to say a
+flood of error or of false doctrine; but whether a flood of water is a
+proper _symbol_ of the same is another question. I do not think it is.
+Water, being an object of nature, would point us to something political.
+False doctrines are usually symbolized by something different from
+objects in nature.
+
+There is considerable difficulty in verifying the symbol, but I will
+submit what up to the present has seemed to me as the most satisfactory
+explanation. It appears from the description that this was about the
+last great public effort the dragon made to overwhelm the church and
+that he was exasperated to this supreme effort by the humiliating defeat
+he had suffered. The means he employed was _water_, an object of nature;
+hence we are to look for some great political event by which the dragon
+made his master-effort to destroy the woman shortly after her flight
+into the wilderness. In A.D. 284 Diocletian, a Pagan, succeeded to the
+imperial throne. Before the close of his reign (305), the Christians
+suffered the most terrible persecution ever received at the hands of
+Pagan Rome. It continued ten years--A.D. 302-312. It was the design of
+this emperor to completely extirpate the very name of Christianity, and
+his unfortunate victims were slain by the thousands throughout the
+empire. "But the master-piece of [his] heathen policy was the order to
+seek and burn all copies of the Word of God. Hitherto the enemy had been
+lopping off the branches of the tree whose leaves were for the healing
+of the nations; now the blow was made at the root. It had once been the
+policy of Antiochus Epiphanes, when he madly sought to destroy the
+Jewish Scriptures. It was both wise and wicked. It had but one defect,
+it could not be carried into complete execution. The sacred treasure was
+in too many hands, and too many of its guardians were brave and prudent,
+to make extermination possible. An African bishop said, 'Here is my
+body, take it, burn it; but I will not deliver up the Word of God.' A
+deacon said, 'Never, sir, never! Had I children I would sooner deliver
+them to you than the divine word.' He and his wife were burnt together."
+Butler's Eccl. History, p. 66.
+
+But "_the earth_ helped the woman"--another unlooked-for political
+event. Worn out with the cares of State, boasting that the very name of
+Christ was abolished, and dying with a loathsome disease, the tyrant
+abdicated his throne. A number of individuals claimed imperial honors;
+but Constantine, the ruler of Gaul, Spain, and Britain, fought his way
+against contending rivals and finally entered Rome, the capital, in
+triumph. Enthroned as emperor of the West, he immediately issued an
+edict of toleration favorable to the Christians (A.D. 313) and soon
+became a professed Christian himself and by law made Christianity the
+established religion of the empire. In 324, having crushed all rivals,
+he became sole emperor of the Roman world, and with a view of promoting
+Christianity convened what is known as the First General Council of the
+Church, at Nicaea in Asia Minor, A.D. 325. The prestige of Paganism as a
+religious power had been overthrown long before by the followers of
+Christ, but now its political importance received a death-blow, only a
+few expiring struggles appearing subsequently before the final downfall
+of Western Rome. Thus, the earth helped the woman and swallowed up the
+flood of persecution which the dragon cast out.
+
+"And the dragon was wroth with the woman, and went to make war with the
+remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of God, and have the
+testimony of Jesus." Finding that he could not destroy or exterminate
+the church of God, he determined to make war upon its individual
+members.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+ And I stood upon the sand of the sea, and saw a beast rise up
+ out of the sea, having seven heads and ten horns, and upon his
+ horns ten crowns, and upon his heads the name of blasphemy.
+
+ 2. And the beast which I saw was like unto a leopard, and his
+ feet were as the feet of a bear, and his mouth as the mouth of a
+ lion: and the dragon gave him his power, and his seat, and great
+ authority.
+
+ 3. And I saw one of his heads as it were wounded to death; and
+ his deadly wound was healed: and all the world wondered after
+ the beast.
+
+ 4. And they worshipped the dragon which gave power unto the
+ beast: and they worshipped the beast, saying, Who is like unto
+ the beast? who is able to make war with him?
+
+ 5. And there was given unto him a mouth speaking great things
+ and blasphemies; and power was given unto him to continue forty
+ and two months.
+
+ 6. And he opened his mouth in blasphemy against God, to
+ blaspheme his name, and his tabernacle, and them that dwell in
+ heaven.
+
+ 7. And it was given unto him to make war with the saints, and to
+ overcome them: and power was given him over all kindreds, and
+ tongues, and nations.
+
+ 8. And all that dwell upon the earth shall worship him, whose
+ names are not written in the book of life of the Lamb slain from
+ the foundation of the world.
+
+ 9. If any man have an ear, let him hear.
+
+ 10. He that leadeth into captivity shall go into captivity: he
+ that killeth with the sword must be killed with the sword. Here
+ is the patience and the faith of the saints.
+
+In this vision John beheld a beast rise out of the sea. His
+appearance--like that of a leopard with the feet of a bear and a mouth
+like a lion--indicated that he was some terrible creature. He was also a
+persecutor of the saints, the same as the dragon that preceded him. As
+before explained, this beast, also, symbolizes the Roman empire; for he
+possesses the same heads and horns as the dragon, the only difference
+being that the supreme power and authority, as indicated by the crowns,
+is now vested in the ten horns, or minor kingdoms, instead of in the
+seven heads. The dragon as a political power represented Rome before her
+overthrow by the barbarians; the beast as a political power represents
+new Rome.
+
+A careful study of the characteristics of this beast, however, will show
+that he represents more than a civil power. As a mere beast from the
+natural world he could symbolize nothing more than some political power;
+but it will be noticed that, combined with his beastly nature, there are
+also certain characteristics that belong exclusively to the department
+of human life--a mouth _speaking_ great things; power to magnify himself
+against the God of heaven; the ability to single out the saints of God
+and kill them, and to set himself up as an object to be worshiped, etc.
+This combination of symbols from the two departments--those of animal
+and of human life--points us with absolute certainty to Rome as a
+politico-religious system. Ask any historian what world-wide power
+succeeded Rome Pagan, and he will answer at once, "Rome Papal."
+
+While it is not my general design to explain the many lines of prophetic
+truth described under similar symbols in other parts of the Bible, yet I
+will ask the reader here to pardon the slight digression while I call
+attention briefly to a few thoughts in the seventh chapter of Daniel
+regarding this same Papal power.
+
+Daniel received a vision of four great beasts, which were interpreted to
+symbolize four universal monarchies. Verse 17. These were the
+Babylonian, the Medo-Persian, the Greco-Macedonian, and the Roman. The
+fourth beast possessed ten horns, which were explained to signify ten
+kingdoms to arise out of the fourth empire. This is identical with the
+dragon of Rev. 12, except the latter possessed seven heads not mentioned
+by Daniel. In the midst of the ten horns (ten minor kingdoms) grew up a
+_little_ horn, which soon assumed greater proportions than his fellows,
+taking the place of three of the original horns, and into his hand the
+saints of the Most High were given for "a time and times and the
+dividing of time," or twelve hundred and sixty years. This eleventh horn
+differed from the ten in that it possessed a mouth speaking great
+things, and the eyes of a man. A horn with eyes and mouth in it is a
+very unusual thing, yet it is just such a combination as we might expect
+when we possess a correct knowledge of symbols. Being drawn from two
+departments--human life and animal life--this double-symbol directs us
+to a politico-religious system that came up among the ten horns that
+grew out of the old Roman empire. We instantly identify it with the
+growing Papacy, which arose to a position of great authority in
+conjunction with the new Roman empire.
+
+Three of the horns, or temporal kingdoms, were overthrown in order to
+give room for the complete development of this politico-religious power.
+Since great changes have frequently occurred among the nations of Europe
+originally embraced in the ten minor kingdoms, different powers have
+been referred to as the three described in Daniel's prophecy; but the
+most satisfactory explanation to my mind is that of the three kingdoms
+in Italy that were overthrown as if to give the hierarchy room for
+development, and that gave the Papacy its _first_ temporal sovereignty,
+thus completing the symbol by constituting her a civil as well as an
+ecclesiastical horn.
+
+Odoacer, in A.D. 476, overthrew the old empire of the West and
+established the kingdom of the Heruli in Italy. Seventeen years later it
+was subverted by Theodoric, who established the kingdom of the
+Ostrogoths, which continued sixty years; then it, in turn, was
+overthrown by Belisarius, but was soon succeeded by the Lombards. The
+Lombard kingdom was subverted by Pepin and Charlemagne, who, as
+champions of the church, gave a large part of their dominions to the See
+of Rome and thus favored the Papacy with her first temporal power. Thus
+were the kingdoms of the Heruli, Ostrogoths, and Lombards plucked up by
+the roots upon the very territory occupied first by the Papacy as a
+temporal power, and as if to give it room.
+
+The careful student of Daniel 7 will notice immediately the striking
+similarity between the politico-religious system symbolized by the
+little horn and the leopard beast of Revelation 13 under consideration.
+The following parallels between them prove their identity:
+
+"1. The little horn was a blasphemous power: 'He shall speak great words
+against the Most High.' Dan. 7:25. The leopard beast of Rev. 13:6 does
+the same: 'He opened his mouth in blasphemy against God.'
+
+"2. The little horn made war with the saints, and prevailed against
+them. Dan. 7:21. This beast also, Rev. 13:7, makes war with the saints,
+and overcomes them.
+
+"3. The little horn had a mouth speaking great things. Dan. 7:8, 20. And
+of this beast we read, Rev. 13:5: 'And there was given unto him a mouth
+speaking great things and blasphemies.'
+
+"4. The little horn rose on the cessation of the Pagan form of the Roman
+empire. This beast rises at the same time; for the dragon, Pagan Rome,
+gives him his power, his seat, and great authority.
+
+"5. Power was given to the little horn to continue for a time, times,
+and the dividing of time, or twelve hundred and sixty years. Dan. 7:25.
+To this beast also power was given for forty and two months, or twelve
+hundred and sixty years. Rev. 13:5.
+
+"6. At the end of the twelve hundred and sixty years the universal
+dominion of the little horn was to begin to decline, being consumed and
+destroyed unto the end. Dan. 7:26. This beast, also, Rev. 13:10, was to
+be led into captivity and 'killed with the sword.'"
+
+These points prove identity. To quote the words of a certain expositor:
+"When we have in prophecy two symbols ... representing powers that come
+upon the stage of action at the _same time_, occupy the _same
+territory_, maintain the _same character_, do the _same work_, exist the
+_same length of time_, and meet the same _fate_, those symbols represent
+the same _identical power_." To this all must agree. Hence we have in
+the vision before us a description of Papal Rome in her two-fold
+character as a temporal and a religious power. The wounding and healing
+of the head of the beast will be explained in chapter XVII.
+
+How the same heads and horns can serve both the dragon and the leopard
+beast will be better understood later. For the present it will be
+sufficient to state that it is because they are the same beast in
+reality, being clothed, in its later form, in a Christian garb, instead
+of the worn-out garments of infidelity or heathenism possessed by the
+former. This transfer is expressed in the following words: "And the
+dragon gave him his power, and his seat, and great authority." Verse 2.
+This beast, then, succeeded to the dominion held by the dragon. It was
+like an old, established firm retiring and giving its standing and
+credit and well-earned reputation to a new partnership, to conduct a
+similar business.
+
+While this beast, as before observed, represents the developed religious
+and political power of the Papacy combined, still the actions ascribed
+to it show plainly that it is in its character as an _ecclesiastical_
+beast that its terrible features are here delineated. No one would
+suppose that a mere political power would set itself up as an object to
+be worshiped, exalting itself above the God of heaven, and then single
+out and slaughter the saints for not complying therewith. As far as
+rendering obedience to civil governments is concerned, the Christians of
+all ages have been the most peaceful and obedient servants of all. So we
+shall hereafter refer always to the _beast_ as an ecclesiastical power,
+unless otherwise stated.
+
+This beast all the world admired. "And they worshiped the dragon which
+gave power unto the beast: and they worshiped the beast, saying, Who is
+like unto the beast? who is able to make war with him?" The people
+worshiped the established hierarchy, and they also worshiped the dragon
+from which the beast obtained so much of his power. The expression
+"_worshiped_ the dragon" shows plainly that it is the dragon as a
+religious system that is referred to, and not the old civil empire. How,
+then, could the old heathen worship be perpetuated in the church of Rome
+and form a part of her religious services? By adopting rites and
+ceremonies purely Pagan in their origin. Since I have already stated
+that the beast and the dragon as temporal powers were about the same in
+reality, except the change of sovereignty from the heads to the horns,
+it will now be necessary to show the remarkable similarity in spirit
+that existed between them as religious powers, the one being the
+successor of the other.
+
+1. The high-priest of the Pagan religions was called Pontifex Maximus,
+and he claimed spiritual and temporal authority over the affairs of men.
+The Pope of Rome possesses the same title and makes the same claims, and
+he is clad in the same attire as the Pagan Pontiff.
+
+2. The heathen were accustomed to wear scapulars, medals, and images to
+shield them from the common ills and dangers of life. Romanists wear the
+same and for the same purpose.
+
+3. The Pagans, by an official process called _deification_, frequently
+exalted men who had lived among them to a position worthy of special
+honor and worship. Papists, by a similar process called _canonisation_,
+raise their former men of prominence to the dignity of _saints_ and then
+offer up prayers to them.
+
+The foregoing practises are derived from Paganism; also from Judaism or
+Paganism came their practise of burning incense in public worship, the
+use of holy water, burning wax candles in the daytime, and votive gifts
+and offerings. Other heathen principles are:
+
+4. Adoration of idols and images, a practise expressly forbidden by the
+Mosaic law and unsanctioned by primitive Christianity;
+
+5. Road gods and saints (in Catholic countries);
+
+6. Processions of worshipers and self-whippers (especially in Catholic
+countries);
+
+7. Religious orders of monks and nuns. One who has read of the vestal
+virgins of old will recognize at once where monkery originated.
+
+In the city of Rome there still stands an old heathen temple built by
+Marcus Agrippa and dedicated in the year B.C. 27 to _all the gods_. In
+the year A.D. 610 it was reconsecrated by Pope Boniface IV. to "the
+blessed Virgin and all the saints." From that time until the present day
+Romanists in the same temple have prostrated themselves before _the very
+same images_ and have devoutly emplored them by the same forms of prayer
+and for the very same purposes as did the heathen of old. The only
+difference is, that instead of calling this idol Jupiter, they call it
+Paul; instead of denominating that one Venus, they call it Mary, etc.
+Well has Bowling said: "The scholar, familiar as he is with the classic
+descriptions of ancient mythology, when he directs his attention to the
+ceremonies of Papal worship, can not avoid recognizing their close
+resemblance, if not their absolute identity. The temples of Jupiter,
+Diana, Venus or Apollo, their 'altars smoking with incense,' their boys
+in sacred habits, holding the incense box, and attending upon the
+priests, their holy water at the entrance of the temples, with their
+_aspergilla_, or sprinkling-brushes, their thuribula, or vessels of
+incense, their ever-burning lamps before the statues of their deities,
+are irresistibly brought before his mind, whenever he visits a Roman
+Catholic place of worship, and witnesses precisely the same things."
+History of Romanism, pp. 109, 110.
+
+Having failed in his direct attacks against the Christian church, with
+the accession of Constantine, who established Christianity as the State
+religion, the dragon soon clothed his pernicious principles in a
+Christian garb and made war against the remnant of the woman's seed that
+kept the commandments of God, through the rising hierarchy, under the
+name of Christianity; but his heads and horns being visible, and he
+being unable to control his tongue, his real sentiments crop out, and he
+is easily identified. It is not to be supposed, however, that the beast
+would appear suddenly in full possession of the immense power ascribed
+to him in this chapter. On the contrary, Daniel represents it as a
+_little_ horn at first, whose look finally became "more stout than his
+fellows." Dan. 7:8, 20. Such ecclesiastical power was attained only by
+the process of gradual development. According to the vision his
+universal power was limited to "forty and two months," or twelve hundred
+and sixty years. Since this has reference to the beast as an
+ecclesiastal power, which according to Daniel grew up by degrees, the
+time should be calculated the same as in chapter 11:2, 3--dated from the
+time when the external, visible church was wholly in the hands of the
+profane multitude of Gentiles and the true church crowded into the
+wilderness. The nationalized hierarchy, however, continued to advance to
+greater degrees of power over the nations, until it reached its zenith
+under the pontificate of Gregory VII., A.D. 1073-1080.
+
+The great things and blasphemies spoken by this beast are doubtless
+fulfilled by the prerogatives and rights belonging to God alone which
+this apostate church, especially through her regularly constituted head,
+claims. In fact, the Pope is the real mouth of this beast, the one who
+dictates her laws with great authority. He claims to be the vicar of
+Christ on earth and supreme head of the church, even, as in the case of
+Pope Innocent, denominating himself the one before whom every knee must
+bow, of things in heaven, and things on earth, and things under the
+earth. He claims power over the souls of all men on earth and even after
+their departure from earth. If this is not blasphemy against God, his
+tabernacle, or church, and "them that dwell in heaven," then I am wholly
+unable to imagine what would fulfil the prediction. Among the
+blasphemous titles assumed are these: Lord God the Pope, King of the
+World, Holy Father, King of kings, and Lord of lords, Vicegerent of the
+Son of God. He claims infallibility (which was backed up by the
+Ecumenical council of 1870) and has for ages. Further, he claims power
+to dispense with God's laws, to forgive sins, to release from purgatory,
+to damn, and to save.
+
+All the inhabitants of the earth were to worship him, except those whose
+names were in the book of life. Thank God that even during the dark age
+of Romanism a people existed who were owned by the Lord and who refused
+to render idolatrous worship to this tyrannical beast. For further
+information regarding these medieval Christians, see remarks on chapter
+11:3. But these saints who opposed the Papal assumptions were made the
+object of fearful persecutions, until Rome glutted herself upon the
+blood of millions of God's holy saints. This will be more fully
+described in chapter 17, where this apostate church appears under
+another symbol, "drunken with the blood of the saints, and with the
+blood of the martyrs of Jesus." In all their severe trials, however,
+they were comforted with the knowledge that Justice would not always
+sleep, but that a time would come when her retributive hand would be
+stretched forth to lead into captivity their persecuting enemies and
+break their world-wide reign of tyranny and usurpation. "Here is the
+patience and the faith of the saints." To a number of people God gave
+special foresight of the coming reformation of the sixteenth century, in
+which the universal spiritual supremacy of the Papacy ended. A few of
+the many examples will be profitable.
+
+Says D'Aubigne: "John Huss preached in Bohemia a century before Luther
+preached in Saxony. He seems to have penetrated deeper than his
+predecessors into the essence of Christian truth. He prayed to Christ
+for grace to glory only in his cross, and in the inestimable humiliation
+of his sufferings.... He was, if we may be allowed the expression, the
+John Baptist of the reformation. The flames of his pile kindled a fire
+in the church that cast a brilliant light into the surrounding darkness,
+and whose glimmerings were not to be so readily extinguished. John Huss
+did more: prophetic words issued from the depths of his dungeon. He
+foresaw that a real reformation of the church was at hand. When driven
+out of Prague and compelled to wander through the fields of Bohemia,
+where an immense crowd followed his steps and hung upon his words, he
+had cried out: 'The wicked have begun by preparing a treacherous snare
+for a goose. But if even the goose, which is only a domestic bird, a
+peaceful animal, and whose flight is not very far in the air, has
+nevertheless broken through their toils, other birds, soaring more
+boldly towards the sky, will break through them with still greater
+force. Instead of a feeble goose, the truth will send forth eagles and
+keen-eyed vultures.' This prediction was fulfilled by the reformers.
+
+"When the venerable priest had been summoned by Sigismund's order before
+the Council of Constance, and had been thrown into prison, the chapel of
+Bethlehem, in which he had proclaimed the gospel and the future triumphs
+of Christ, occupied his mind much more than his own defence. One night
+the holy martyr saw in imagination, from the depths of his dungeon, the
+pictures of Christ which he had painted on the walls of his oratory,
+effaced by the Pope and his bishops. This vision distressed him; but on
+the next day he saw many painters occupied in restoring these figures in
+greater number and in brighter colors. As soon as the task was ended,
+the painters, who were surrounded by an immense crowd, exclaimed, 'Now
+let the popes and bishops come! they shall never efface them more!' And
+many people rejoiced in Bethlehem, and I with them, adds John Huss.
+'Busy yourself with your defence rather than with your dreams,' said his
+faithful friend, the Knight of Chlum, to whom he had communicated this
+vision. 'I am no dreamer,' replied Huss, 'but I maintain this for
+certain, that the image of Christ will never be effaced. They have
+wished to destroy it, but it shall be painted afresh in all hearts by
+much better preachers than myself. The nation that loves Christ will
+rejoice at this. And I, awaking from the dead, and rising so to speak,
+from my grave, shall leap with great joy.'" History of the Reformation,
+Book I, Chap. 6.
+
+This bold witness for Christ was burned at the stake July 6, 1415, by
+order of the General Council of Constance. When the fagots were piled up
+around him ready for the torch, he said to the executioner, "You are now
+going to burn a goose [Huss signifying goose in the Bohemian language];
+but in a century you will have a swan whom you can neither roast nor
+boil." Fox's Book of Martyrs. This was fulfilled in Martin Luther.
+
+Henry Institorus, an inquisitor, uttered these remarkable words: "'All
+the world cries out and demands a council, but there is no human power
+that can reform the church by a council. The Most High will find other
+means, which are at present unknown to us, although they may be at our
+very doors, to bring back the church to its pristine condition.' This
+remarkable prophecy, delivered by an inquisitor at the very period of
+Luther's birth, is the best apology for the reformation."
+
+Andrew Proles, provincial of the Augustines, used often to say: "Whence,
+then, proceeds so much darkness and such horrible superstitions? O my
+brethren! Christianity needs a bold and a great reform, and methinks I
+see it already approaching.... I am bent with the weight of years, and
+weak in body, and I have not the learning, the ability, and eloquence,
+that so great an undertaking requires. But God will raise up a hero, who
+by his age, strength, talents, learning, genius and eloquence, shall
+hold the foremost place. He will begin the reformation; he will oppose
+error, and God will give him boldness to resist the mighty ones of the
+earth."
+
+John Hilten censured the most flagrant abuses of the monastic life, and
+the exasperated monks threw him into prison and treated him shamefully.
+"The Franciscan, forgetting his malady and groaning heavily, replied: 'I
+bear your insults calmly for the love of Christ; for I have said nothing
+that can injure the monastic state: I have only censured its most crying
+abuses.' 'But,' continued he (according to what Melancthon records in
+his Apology for the Augsburg Confession of Faith), 'another man will
+rise in the year of our Lord 1516: he will destroy you, and you shall
+not be able to resist him.'"
+
+In 1516 Luther held a public discussion with Feld-kirchen, in which he
+upheld certain doctrines of truth that made a great stir among the
+Romanists. Says D'Aubigne: "The disputation took place in 1516. This was
+Luther's first attack upon the dominion of the sophists and upon the
+Papacy, as he himself characterizes it." And again, "This disputation
+made a great noise, and it has been considered as the beginning of the
+reformation." Book I, Chap. 9. The next year, however, he entered
+publicly upon the actual work of reformation.
+
+Frederick of Saxony, surnamed the Wise, was the most powerful elector of
+the German empire at the period of the reformation. A dream he had and
+related just before the world was startled by the first great act of
+reformation is so striking that I feel justified in repeating it in this
+connection. It was as follows:
+
+"Having gone to bed last night, tired and dispirited, I soon fell asleep
+after saying my prayers, and slept calmly for about two hours and a
+half. I then awoke, and all kinds of thoughts occupied me until
+midnight.... I then fell asleep again, and dreamed the Almighty sent me
+a monk, who was a true son of Paul the apostle. He was accompanied by
+all the saints, in obedience to God's command, to bear him testimony,
+and to assure me that he did not come with any fraudulent design, but
+that all he should do was conformable to the will of God. They asked my
+gracious permission to let him write something on the doors of the
+palace-chapel at Wittemberg, which I conceded through my chancellor.
+Upon this, the monk retired thither and began to write; so large were
+the characters that I could read from Schweinitz what he was writing
+[about 18 miles]. The pen he used was so long that its extremity reached
+as far as Rome, where it pierced the ears of a lion which lay there, and
+shook the triple crown on the Pope's head. All the cardinals and princes
+ran up hastily and endeavored to support it.... I stretched out my arm:
+that moment I awoke with my arm extended, in great alarm and very angry
+with this monk, who could not guide his pen better. I recovered myself a
+little.... It was only a dream. I was still half asleep, and once more
+closed my eyes. The dream came again. The lion, still disturbed by the
+pen, began to roar with all his might, until the whole city of Rome, and
+all the States of the holy empire, ran up to know what was the matter.
+The Pope called upon us to oppose this monk, and addressed himself
+particularly to me, because the friar was living in my dominions. I
+again awoke, repeated the Lord's prayer, entreated God to preserve his
+Holiness, and fell asleep.... I then dreamt that all the princes of the
+empire, and we along with them, hastened to Rome, and endeavored one
+after another to break this pen; but the greater our exertions the
+stronger it became: it crackled as if it had been made of iron: we gave
+it up as hopeless. I then asked the monk (for I was now at Rome, now at
+Wittemberg) where he had got that pen, and how it came to be so strong.
+[In those days they used goosequills for pens.] 'This pen,' replied he,
+'belonged to a Bohemian goose [Huss] a hundred years old. I had it from
+one of my old schoolmasters. It is so strong because no one can take the
+pith out of it, and I am myself quite astonished at it.' On a sudden I
+heard a loud cry; from the monk's long pen had issued a host of other
+pens. I awoke a third time; it was day light." History of the
+Reformation, Book III, Chap. 4.
+
+Frederick related the foregoing to his brother John, the Duke of York,
+on the morning of Oct. 31, 1517, stating that he had dreamed it during
+the previous night. The same day at noon Martin Luther advanced boldly
+to the chapel at Wittemberg and posted upon the door ninety-five theses,
+or propositions, against the Papal doctrine of indulgences. This was his
+public entrance upon the great work of reformation. The importance of
+the Reformation of the Sixteenth Century is incalculable. It gave the
+deathblow to the universal spiritual supremacy of Rome. As we have
+already seen, the Papacy had for centuries held despotic sway over the
+minds and the consciences of men. One potent cause of the Reformation
+was the great Revival of Learning that marked the close of the medieval
+and the beginning of the modern period of history. This great mental
+awakening contrasted sharply with the blind ignorance and superstition
+of the Middle Ages, and caused many men to doubt the Scriptural
+authority of many of the doctrines and ceremonies of the Church of Rome;
+such as invocation of saints, auricular confession, use of images,
+worship of the Virgin Mary, etc.
+
+Scandals and abuses in the Church of Rome also hastened the Reformation.
+During the fifteenth century the morals of that church had sunk to the
+greatest depths of iniquity. The Popes themselves were, in some cases,
+monsters of impurity and iniquity, insomuch that historians are obliged
+to draw the vail over many of their dark deeds.
+
+But the real occasion of the revolt of the northern nations of Europe
+against the jurisdiction of Rome was the controversy regarding
+indulgences. "These in the Catholic church, are remissions, to penitents
+of punishment due for sin, upon the performances of some work of mercy
+or piety, or the payment of a sum of money." When Leo X. was elected to
+the Papal dignity (1513), he found the church in great need of money for
+the building of Saint Peter's and other undertakings, and he had
+recourse to a grant of indulgences to fill the coffers of the church.
+The power of dispensing these indulgences in Saxony in Germany was given
+to a Dominican friar named Tetzel. This fanatic enthusiast entertained
+the most exaggerated opinion of the efficacy of indulgences. In his
+harrangues he uttered such expressions as the following:
+
+"Indulgences are the most precious and the most noble of God's gifts."
+"There is no sin so great that an indulgence can not remit; ... only let
+him pay well, and all will be forgiven him." "Come, and I will give you
+letters, all properly sealed, by which even the sins that you intend to
+commit may be pardoned." "I would not change my privileges for those of
+St. Peter in heaven; for I have saved more souls by my indulgences than
+the apostle by his sermons." "The Lord Omnipotent hath ceased to reign;
+he has resigned all power to the Pope." See D'Aubigne's History of the
+Reformation, Book III, Chap. 1.
+
+Martin Luther was an Augustine monk and a teacher of theology in the
+University of Wittemberg. Before Tetzel appeared in Germany, Luther
+possessed a wide reputation for learning and piety, and he had also
+entertained doubts respecting many of the doctrines of the church.
+During an official visit to Rome in 1510 he was almost overwhelmed with
+sorrow because of the moral corruption there; but while penitentially
+ascending on his knees the sacred stairs of the Lateran, he seemed to
+hear a voice thundering in his soul, "The just shall live by faith!"
+This marked an important epoch in his career.
+
+When Tetzel appeared in Saxony with his indulgences, Luther fearlessly
+opposed him. He drew up ninety-five theses against the infamous traffic
+and nailed them to the door of the church at Wittemberg, and invited all
+scholars to criticise them and point out if they were opposed to the
+doctrine of the Word of God or of the early church Fathers. Here the
+invention of printing proved to be a powerful agency in advancing the
+cause of reformation by scattering copies of these theses everywhere;
+and soon the continent of Europe was in a perfect turmoil of
+controversy. The Pope excommunicated Luther as a heretic. In reply
+Luther burned the Papal bull publicly at Wittemberg. Shortly afterward
+Luther produced his celebrated translation of the Bible in the German
+language. Even a brief history of the entire Reformation would be too
+large for the limits of the present volume, therefore with a few words
+respecting the nature of the work of the Reformation we will pass on to
+another prophetic vision.
+
+The great secret of the early success of the reformers was their appeal
+from the decisions of councils and regulations of men to the Word of
+God. So long as the Word and Spirit of God were allowed their proper
+place as the Governors of God's people, the work was a spiritual
+blessing. But this happy state of affairs did not long continue. Within
+a few years the followers of the reformers were divided into hostile
+sects and began to oppose and persecute each other. Luther denounced
+Zwingle as a heretic, and "the Calvinists would have no dealings with
+the Lutherans." The first Protestant creed was the Augsburg Confession
+(1530). This date marks an important epoch. From this time the people
+began to lose sight of the Word and Spirit of God as their Governors and
+to turn to the disciplines of their sects, which they upheld by every
+means possible. Thus we find Calvin at Geneva consenting to the burning
+of Servetus, because of a difference of religious views; and in England
+the Anglican Protestants waged the most bitter, cruel, and relentless
+war not only against Catholics, but against all Protestants who refused
+to conform to the Established Church. The Protestants placed armies in
+the field and fought for their creeds, as during the Thirty Years' War
+in Germany and the long period of the Hugenot wars in France. The real
+work of the Reformation, the promulgation of so much of the truth of the
+Bible, was an inestimable blessing to the world; but the rise of
+Protestantism (organized sectism) in 1530 introduced another period of
+apostasy as distinct in many of its features as was that of Romanism
+before it. The historian D'Aubigne recognizes an important change at
+this period. He says:
+
+"The first two books of this volume contain the most important epochs of
+the Reformation--the Protest of Spires, and the Confession of
+Augsburg.... I determined on bringing the reformation of Germany and
+German Switzerland to the _decisive epochs of_ 1530 and 1531. The
+history of the Reformation, properly so-called, is then in my opinion
+almost complete in those countries. The work of faith has there attained
+its apogee: that of conferences, of interims, of diplomacy begins....
+The movement of the Sixteenth Century has there made its effort. I said
+from the very first, It is the history of the Reformation and not of
+Protestantism that I am relating." Preface to Vol. V.
+
+ 11. And I beheld another beast coming up out of the earth; and
+ he had two horns like a lamb, and he spake as a dragon.
+
+ 12. And he exerciseth all the power of the first beast before
+ him, and causeth the earth and them which dwell therein to
+ worship the first beast, whose deadly wound was healed.
+
+ 13. And he doeth great wonders, so that he maketh fire come down
+ from heaven on the earth in the sight of men,
+
+ 14. And deceiveth them that dwell on the earth by the means of
+ those miracles which he had power to do in the sight of the
+ beast; saying to them that dwell on the earth, that they should
+ make an image to the beast, which had the wound by a sword, and
+ did live.
+
+ 15. And he had power to give life unto the image of the beast,
+ that the image of the beast should both speak, and cause that as
+ many as would not worship the image of the beast should be
+ killed.
+
+ 16. And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor,
+ free and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in
+ their foreheads:
+
+ 17. And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the
+ mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.
+
+ 18. Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the
+ number of the beast: for it is the number of a man; and his
+ number is Six hundred threescore and six.
+
+The symbolic description of this beast directs us also to a political
+and a religious system rising at the expiration of the twelve hundred
+and sixty years' reign of the first beast, but that he was no such
+terrible beast politically as the one before him is proved by the fact
+that he had but two horns and they _like a lamb_. This beast rose "out
+of the earth"--the Apocalyptic earth, or the territory of the Roman
+empire. The first beast rose out of the sea, which, as before shown,
+signifies the heart of the empire in an agitated state; for the ten
+horns came up through the greatest political convulsions that the page
+of history records. When John beheld the second beast "coming up,"
+however, the empire was in a state of comparative quiet, although fierce
+wars followed afterward. He stands as a symbol of _Protestantism_ in
+Europe; although his power and influence afterwards extended beyond the
+"earth"--the Apocalyptic earth--into "the whole world." Chap. 16:14.
+That this beast came up upon the same territory occupied by the Papacy
+is proved also by the statement that "he exerciseth all the power of the
+first beast before him." It was predicted in a subsequent chapter
+(17:16) that the ten horns, or kingdoms of Europe, after supporting the
+Papacy during the Dark Ages, would later turn against her. This has met
+a remarkable fulfilment under the reign of Protestantism.
+
+The first two nations to turn violently against Popery were England and
+Germany. They have ever since been the chief supporters and defenders of
+Protestantism, and they are doubtless the two kingdoms symbolized by the
+two horns of the beast. While at one time the Pope was a temporal
+sovereign and could, by his political and ecclesiastical power, humble
+with ease the mightiest nations of Europe before him, his authority has
+been wrested from him by degrees, so that to-day not a vestige of his
+temporal power remains, and his anathemas fall harmlessly. The nations
+have asserted their rights as kings. When King Victor Emmanuel entered
+Rome on the twentieth day of September, 1870, the Pope's temporal sun
+set forever, and he does not control even the city in which he
+lives--Rome. He is often referred to as "the prisoner of the Vatican."
+"He that leadeth into captivity shall go into captivity," said the
+prophecy; "he that killeth with the sword must be killed with the
+sword." It was by force of arms that the Popes obtained and maintained
+their temporal power over the nations, and by the force of arms they
+have had their authority torn from them. Religion has been referred to
+as "the basis of government"; for the legislators of any country are to
+a great degree influenced in their deliberations by religious
+sentiments. In all Protestant countries that greatest of Protestant
+principles, religious liberty, is as truly recognized by statute as was
+that infernal principle of the Papacy, religious intolerance, when
+formerly enforced by law. Protestant principles have so far permeated
+the nations of Europe formerly controlled by the Papacy that religious
+toleration is generally granted. In Italy, the headquarters of Popedom,
+where the Catholics are greatly in the majority, religious liberty is
+granted by law. And even Spain, denominated by the Encyclopaedia
+Britannica "the most Catholic country in the world," exhibits "a general
+indifferentism to religion," meaning that the fanaticism and intolerance
+of former ages that caused thousands, and perhaps millions, to be slain,
+is rapidly dying out. In the vision before us, however, the special
+actions ascribed to this beast--_speaking_, working miracles, deceiving,
+making an image and imparting life to it, etc., which all belong
+properly to the department of human life--show conclusively that it is
+the character of this beast as an _ecclesiastical power_ that is the
+chief point under consideration. He was not to become such a terrible
+beast politically (for his horns were only _like a lamb_), but "he
+_spake_ as a dragon." As soon as we enter the department to which
+_speaking_ by analogy refers us, we find this beast to be a great
+religious power; and it is in this character alone that he is dilineated
+in the remainder of the chapter. That the description of a religious
+system is the main burden of this symbol, is shown also by the fact that
+it is in every case referred to in subsequent chapters as the "false
+prophet." Chap. 16:13; 19:20; 20:10. Therefore every reference I make to
+this second beast hereafter should be understood as signifying the
+religious system of Protestantism, unless otherwise stated.
+
+That Protestantism in its many forms can be properly represented by a
+single symbol--a beast or false prophet--may seem a little strange at
+first; but when we come to consider next the making of an image to the
+beast, it will be seen that the Protestant sects, from God's standpoint
+of viewing, are all alike in character, as were the multitudinous forms
+of heathen worship represented under the single symbol of the dragon.
+Hence only one beast, or the making of one image, was necessary to stand
+as representative of the entire number. It will be noticed by the reader
+that from verse 12 to the close of the chapter the term _beast_
+signifies the first beast, or the Papacy, and that the second beast, or
+Protestantism, is designated by the pronoun _he_.
+
+_Image_ is defined to be "an imitation, representation, similitude of
+any person or thing; a copy, a likeness, an effigy." The second beast,
+then, is to manufacture something in _imitation_ of the first beast. If
+any doubt exists as to which phase of the first beast, political or
+ecclesiastical, is copied, it can be settled by considering what is said
+of the image made from the original. "The image of the beast
+should--_speak_." This directs us by analogy, as heretofore explained,
+to the department of religious affairs; hence the second beast forms an
+_ecclesiastical organization_ in imitation of the hierarchy of Rome. At
+this juncture the Protestant will doubtless exclaim, "Oh, our churches
+are nothing like the church of Rome!" But consider a little in the light
+of truth. God's Word teaches that they bear the close relationship of
+_mother_ and her _daughters_ (Rev. 17:5), and by the help of the Lord we
+shall point out a similarity of character in this and subsequent
+chapters. The symbol of the church of Rome in chapter 17 is that of a
+corrupt _prostitute_, while the symbol of Protestantism is that of her
+_harlot daughters_. The Roman church is a humanly organized institution
+governed by a set of fallible men, their claims of infallibility to the
+contrary notwithstanding. Protestant sects, likewise, are all human
+organizations (even though they may sometimes deny it), and are governed
+by a man or a conference of men. The Roman Catholic church makes and
+prescribes the theology that her members believe. Protestant churches,
+also, make their own disciplines and prescribe rules of faith and
+practise. The Word of God, inspired by his Spirit, could not be enforced
+in Romanism without destroying it; for its main spirit is Antichrist.
+So, too, the whole Word in Protestantism would soon annihilate her
+God-dishonoring sects; for they are all contrary to its plain teachings,
+which condemn divisions and enjoin perfect unity and oneness upon the
+redeemed of the Lord. What is said concerning the image of the beast
+applies to sectarianism as a whole and the human organization of all her
+so-called churches, regardless of the differences that exist between
+them as individual institutions; for they may differ as widely as the
+various systems of heathen religions symbolized by the dragon, yet they
+can be represented by the single symbol of an image to the first beast,
+because they are built upon the same general principles--are but human
+organizations, falsely called churches of Christ, and are all contrary
+to the Scriptures.
+
+Imparting life to the image of the beast simply signifies the complete
+organization of the ecclesiastical institutions so that they are capable
+of self-government and their decrees possess authority. Every living
+body is animated by a spirit. The sectarian spirit that animates the
+Methodist body will lead people into that body, etc.; but the one Spirit
+of God will, if permitted, baptize us all into the one body of Christ,
+where we can all "drink into one Spirit." 1 Cor. 12:13. "And he spake as
+a dragon" signifies the great authority by which his laws are enacted
+and enforced upon the people.
+
+"And he doeth great wonders, so that he maketh fire come down from
+heaven on the earth in the sight of men, and deceiveth them that dwell
+on the earth by the means of those miracles which he had power to do in
+the sight of the beast; saying to them that dwell on the earth, that
+they should make an image to the beast." Fire from heaven upon Elijah's
+sacrifice was the attestation of God to his divine mission. Bringing
+down fire from heaven, then, symbolically describes the claims of this
+beast to being a true prophet of the Lord.
+
+At this point we must make a distinction which, being true in the facts
+of history, must necessarily be intended in the symbolic representation.
+According to the symbols of the preceding chapter the woman, or true
+church, "fled into the wilderness, where she hath a place prepared of
+God, that they should feed her there a thousand two hundred and
+threescore days." The time-prophecy is the same and covers the same
+period as the reign of the Papal beast; therefore just as an important
+change in the Papacy occured at the expiration of the prophetic period,
+so also we must expect a radical change with respect to the true church:
+it must no longer be completely obscured in the wilderness.
+
+As the Reformation, and Protestantism as a religion, was the means of
+ending Rome's universal spiritual supremacy, so also the same movement
+must be regarded as possessing sufficient light and truth to again bring
+into prominence the work of the Spirit and the true people of God. "Fire
+from heaven" may therefore be regarded as describing the divine work of
+reformation, the unfolding of truth accompanied by the saving power of
+God. Such spiritual work has accompanied the origin of various religious
+movements during the Protestant era.
+
+The general description of the two-horned beast, however, brings into
+prominence an evil characteristic--the disposition to lead people into
+deception by making an image to the beast and then worshiping it. The
+evil does not inhere in the work of bringing down "fire from heaven,"
+but in image-making and image-worship, for which the Spiritual work
+simply furnished an occasion. The Spiritual work of reformation is
+therefore to be distinguished from the later work of creed- and
+sect-making. And since the beast takes advantage of Spirit
+manifestations, in order to deceive men, he becomes a sort of apostate
+and is denominated "the _false prophet_." See Chap. 16:14; 19:20.
+
+Ecclesiastically considered, the two-horned beast stands as the symbol
+of the religious system of Protestantism as a whole--a peculiar
+combination of truth and error, of good and bad, of "fire from heaven"
+and false, miracle-working power (chap. 16:14); while the "image to the
+beast" signifies the sectarian institution--the man-made,
+man-controlled, unscriptural sect machinery manufactured in imitation of
+the Papal original. To exalt such earth-born churches and lead people to
+adore and worship them is but a species of idolatry and the rankest
+deception. It is a sad fact that multitudes of people in Protestantism
+are more devoted to their particular church than they are to the Lord
+Jesus Christ. They can witness the open rejection of God's precious Word
+and the vilest profanation of his holy name, without uttering a word of
+protest; but let anyone say a word against _their church_, and instantly
+they are aroused to the highest pitch of excitement--beast-worshipers!
+
+The Protestant era has witnessed many wonderful reformations in which
+the true fire of God fell upon waiting souls, but this initial work of
+the Spirit has in each case been employed as an excuse for taking the
+next step--making an image. Thousands of honest souls, lacking better
+light, have been induced to submit to such human organization. But the
+truly saved have always loved and adored their Lord more than the human
+church to which they were attached, therefore they should not be
+regarded as beast-worshipers. They are the ones whom the Lord
+denominates his people when the voice is heard calling them out of
+Babylon. Chap. 18:4.
+
+The "mark of the beast" next claims our attention. The beast referred to
+is the Papacy. How did the Papacy mark its subjects? Undoubtedly, by the
+false spirit which animated that organization, branding them all with
+its delusive doctrines and errors. In a previous chapter the servants of
+God were represented as receiving the seal of God in their foreheads.
+This was shown to signify the pure Word and doctrines of the Bible being
+planted within them by the Holy Spirit. In making the sect image in
+imitation of the Papal original, then, the principle of marking subjects
+has also been copied. The members of every sect organization are
+indelibly marked. You can not become one of them without solemnly
+agreeing to believe the doctrines taught in their discipline and
+accepting the government of their man-made institutions. Subscribing to
+the rules of faith and practise that originated with the sect shows how
+its members worship the image. They are also said to worship the first
+beast, the original of the image. How is this fulfilled? In the same
+manner that the worshipers of the first beast worshiped the dragon that
+preceded it; namely, by accepting and believing false principles of
+faith that originated in the system immediately preceding. Protestant
+sects have transferred many of the false doctrines of Romanism to their
+own creeds, hence they worship the first beast just as truly as the
+Papists worshiped the dragon by accepting heathenish principles. The
+greatest principle of false doctrine that originated with Catholicism,
+and one that has been transferred to _every Protestant sect_, is, that a
+human organization is necessary to complete the church of Christ on
+earth. The church of Rome has an earthly head and a human government;
+and Protestants, also, firmly believe the unscriptural doctrine that
+they must bow to an organization of men and thus be under a visible
+headship: they receive the mark of the beast. Many sects have also
+copied other Popish doctrines, such as infant baptism, the destruction
+of all outside of the pales of the church (?), infantile damnation,
+sprinkling, and other things too numerous to mention. Thus, they worship
+the first beast as well as his image.
+
+They also receive the "name of the beast." Here again "beast" refers to
+the Papacy. The Papal beast was represented as being full of the names
+of blasphemy, which blasphemy was shown to signify the usurpation of
+prerogatives and rights belonging to God alone. The greatest
+ecclesiastical usurpation reached by the Romish hierarchy was that of
+claiming to be the head of the church and the right to prescribe and
+enforce their doctrines, naming their organization the _Holy Catholic
+Church_. In making their sect organizations in imitation, Protestants,
+as above stated, have transferred the same principle and make the same
+blasphemous claim of a right to make disciplines to govern God's people,
+and then name their sect machinery a _church_ of God. The name may be
+Methodist, Baptist, Mennonite, Episcopalian, or what not, it is only a
+_beast name_, yet a name that you must accept if you desire to become
+one of them.
+
+They not only receive the name of the beast, but also receive the
+"number of his name." It will be necessary first to explain what is
+meant by the number of a name. "The modern system of notation by the
+nine digits and the cipher, was not introduced until the tenth century,
+but on account of its superior excellence, has since superseded every
+other. Previous to this great discovery, the letters of the alphabet
+were used to denote numbers, each letter having the power of a _number_
+as well as a _sound_. The same system is still retained among us for
+certain purposes. The Roman letters I. V. X. L. C. D. M., have each the
+power of expressing a number. This, however, was the common and the best
+mode of notation that the ancients possessed." The number of a name,
+therefore, was merely the number denoted by the several letters of that
+name.
+
+The number of the name of the beast--the first beast--is said to be the
+number of a _man_. When we enter the Romish hierarchy and search for a
+man the number of whose name will be six hundred and sixty-six, where
+could we go more appropriately than to the Pope himself, its authorized
+head? The Scriptures point him out particularly as the "_man_ of sin,"
+"the son of perdition." 2 Thes. 2:3, 4. Has the Pope of Rome a name the
+letters of which, used as numerals, make six hundred and sixty-six? Yes.
+He wears in jeweled letters upon his miter the following blasphemous
+inscription: _Vicarius Filii Dei_--Vicar of the Son of God. Taking out
+of this name all the letters that the Latins used as numerals, we have
+just six hundred and sixty-six. U and V were both formerly used to
+denote five.
+
+ V ..... 5 F ..... 0
+ I ..... 1 I ..... 1
+ C ... 100 L .... 50
+ A ..... 0 I ..... 1
+ R ..... 0 I ..... 1
+ I ..... 1 D ... 500
+ U ..... 5 E ..... 0
+ S ..... 0 I ..... 1
+ ---
+ 666
+
+In some manner the worshipers of Protestant images also receive the
+number of this name--six hundred and sixty-six. The name is that of
+"Vicar of the Son of God." In all Protestantism (see remarks on chapter
+11:7, 8) the true Vicars of Christ on earth--the Word and Spirit of
+God--have been set aside, and conferences of men have taken their places
+in all the official acts relative to spiritual affairs. Hence the number
+of the name applies to them as well. What that number specially
+symbolizes I do not know, unless it is, as has been explained by
+others--_division_. While the policy of Romanism has been that of unity,
+still the false claims made by one individual can be as well made by
+another, and by many, which has been the case, as just explained;
+therefore it would not be improper at all to make the Pope's number a
+symbol of the whole, since his system has been so largely copied by the
+rest. The whole structure of sectarianism is built on the principle of
+division, and it so happens that there is always enough left to divide
+again. So this special number is perhaps the symbol of endless division,
+signifying the great number of human organizations claiming to be
+churches of Christ. The church of God, however, is built on the
+principal of unity; division is destruction to its true nature and life,
+for it is Christ's body.
+
+It is further said that "no man might buy or sell, save he that had the
+mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name." To "buy or
+sell" is to engage in the ordinary pursuits of life and have intercourse
+with human society. Applying this as a symbol to the analagous
+department of the church, we have the fact set forth that those without
+the special mark have no more recognized standing in the so-called
+churches than men that are not allowed to buy or sell have in a
+community. But _selling_, as a symbol, would specially indicate the
+dealing out of truth, or the preaching of the gospel. A Holy Ghost
+minister in the clear light of heaven's truth, independent of all the
+creeds of Babylon, will not be allowed the privilege of laboring freely
+among sectarians, after the truth for which he stands becomes well
+known. And if he holds meetings in the community, the members of the
+sects are often warned by their leaders against "buying"--receiving--it
+from the Holy Ghost minister, because of his not having the mark or name
+of the beast. Their ministers are specially marked, for they come out of
+their colleges and theological seminaries with the stamp of their
+respective doctrines upon them and a license from the sect to enter its
+ministry; and those not thus marked or designated have no place among
+them. This may also explain the manner in which the beast causes those
+who will not worship the image to be killed--an analagous killing;
+namely, an ecclesiastical cutting-off, or excommunication, as explained
+in previous chapters.[9]
+
+[Footnote 9: The early history of Protestantism shows that at that time
+the principle of religious intolerance brought over from Romanism
+manifested itself in the actual putting to death of numerous dissenters.
+For example see pp. 252, 291-294 of the present work. It is possible
+that the persecuting principle ascribed to the two-horned beast may
+include both the literal and the ecclesiastical cutting-off, reference
+being made directly to the intolerant spirit.]
+
+The facts just stated are well illustrated by the following
+circumstances. A few years ago a brother in the ministry went into a
+certain town to find a place to conduct a series of holiness meetings.
+He was directed by a Presbyterian lady to their pastor, who, she said,
+was a believer in the doctrine of holiness. When he called on the
+minister and made known his errand, the first question asked him was
+this, "Are you a member of the Presbyterian church?" The brother
+answered in the negative. He did not have the _name of the beast_. The
+next question that greeted him was this, "Do you believe the Westminster
+Confession of Faith to be orthodox?" He answered, "No, sir." He did not
+have the _mark of the beast_. The last question asked was, "Do you
+belong to any of the various orthodox Protestant denominations?" The
+brother said, "No." He did not have the _number of his name_. The answer
+was, "You can not have our house."
+
+While on a missionary trip in the Near East, the writer, in company with
+another brother, attended a Seventh-Day Adventist service in Bucharest,
+Roumania. After the sermon another brother requested that we be given
+the opportunity to speak a little, but the request was absolutely
+refused. It was explained that we would say nothing against them or
+their work but only speak about salvation; but we were not permitted
+even to testify in a few words. The difficulty was that we did not have
+either the "mark of the beast" or its "name."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+ And I looked, and, lo, a Lamb stood on the mount Sion, and with
+ him an hundred forty and four thousand, having his Father's name
+ written in their foreheads.
+
+ 2. And I heard a voice from heaven, as the voice of many waters,
+ and as the voice of a great thunder: and I heard the voice of
+ harpers harping with their harps:
+
+ 3. And they sung as it were a new song before the throne, and
+ before the four beasts, and the elders: and no man could learn
+ that song but the hundred and forty and four thousand, which
+ were redeemed from the earth.
+
+ 4. These are they which were not defiled with women; for they
+ are virgins. These are they which follow the Lamb whithersoever
+ he goeth. These were redeemed from among men, being the
+ firstfruits unto God and to the Lamb.
+
+ 5. And in their mouth was found no guile: for they are without
+ fault before the throne of God.
+
+There is no difficulty in identifying this company on Mount Sion as the
+true people of God in marked contrast with the worshipers of all corrupt
+and false religion. As to the chronology of the event, it is evident
+that we have here a continuation of the same series of prophecy
+beginning with the apostolic period in chapter XII, describing
+alternately the true church and the false church.
+
+At the beginning of this series the true church, symbolized by the
+star-crowned woman, fled into the wilderness and was there lost to view;
+while the leopard beast and the two-horned beast of chapter XIII,
+symbolizing the two leading forms of organized Christianity, were
+brought into prominent view. It is therefore fitting that the true
+church should again appear and be given her proper position and work in
+the world before the end of all earthly things.
+
+That the company here brought to view represents the true church is
+shown by its agreement with the church of God before the apostasy began.
+In the seventh chapter we have seen that before the political calamities
+befell the Western Roman Empire the work of sealing God's servants was
+accomplished, twelve thousand from each of the twelve tribes of Israel
+being sealed, thus representing symbolically the fact that God's church,
+comprising the true Israel, was perfect and complete, no part being
+omitted. In the chapter under consideration we have this divine sealing
+process again after the apostasy, and once more the definite number
+144,000 occurs, showing that the church before the end is to be perfect
+and complete.
+
+The contrast of this company with the ecclesiastical powers in the
+preceding chapter proclaims in an unmistakeable manner the fact that we
+have here described a true reformation and work of God before the end of
+time. In the morning-time of the dispensation the redeemed of earth were
+represented as singing praises to Christ; so also the company here
+brought to view unite in singing a song which only the redeemed can
+know. This company is on Mount Sion, not in the darkness of the
+wilderness, they are with the Lamb, not wandering after the beast; they
+are not even following the beast that was "like a lamb," but they are
+with the true Lamb, the Savior of the world; they have the "Father's
+name written in their foreheads," not the mark or the name of the beast.
+It is said of them that "these are they which were not defiled with
+women, for they are virgins." Fornication and adultery, as will be
+explained later, is a symbol of spiritual idolatry; and the chastity of
+this redeemed company shows that they were free from the abominations of
+the apostasy. They "follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth." Their names
+are in the book of life, and they do not worship the beast. Chap. 13:8.
+
+Here, then, we have a symbol of the church of God in the latter days
+standing distinct from the great apostasy.
+
+ 6. And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having
+ the everlasting gospel to preach unto them that dwell on the
+ earth, and to every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people,
+
+ 7. Saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him;
+ for the hour of his judgment is come: and worship him that made
+ heaven, and earth, and the sea, and the fountains of waters.
+
+ 8. And there followed another angel, saying, Babylon is fallen,
+ is fallen, that great city, because she made all nations drink
+ of the wine of the wrath of her fornication.
+
+ 9. And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice,
+ If any man worship the beast and his image, and receive his mark
+ in his forehead, or in his hand,
+
+ 10. The same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which
+ is poured out without mixture into the cup of his indignation;
+ and he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the
+ presence of the holy angels, and in the presence of the Lamb:
+
+ 11. And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and
+ ever: and they have no rest day nor night, who worship the beast
+ and his image, and whosoever receiveth the mark of his name.
+
+ 12. Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep
+ the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.
+
+ 13. And I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, Write,
+ Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth: Yea,
+ saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labors; and
+ their works do follow them.
+
+Another phase of the last reformation is here brought to view--its
+communicative genius. It not only stands clear from the apostasy, but it
+sounds the warnings of God and proclaims his message. The first
+messenger had a very important message to deliver, even "the everlasting
+gospel." His message was not limited to the inhabitants of "the
+earth"--the Apocalyptic earth--only, but included "every nation, and
+kindred, and tongue, and people," showing that it was of universal
+importance. It was not a new gospel, but the everlasting gospel, the
+same gospel preached before the long period of apostasy. There is one
+phase different, however, and that is that the _nearness_ of the second
+coming of Christ is a leading feature; the messenger with loud voice
+warns the people to prepare for the awful judgment just at hand by
+turning to "worship him that made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and
+the fountains of waters." The apostle Paul cautioned the Thessalonian
+brethren not to entertain the idea that the advent of Christ was then
+near at hand, for it could not come until after the great period of
+apostasy that he predicted; but here is a messenger now claiming that
+the "_hour of his judgment is come_"--an event just at hand. He carries
+his special message to all people; for Jesus declared, "This gospel of
+the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all
+nations; and _then shall the end come_." Matt. 24:14. This represents
+the restoration of gospel truth in the reformation that was begun about
+the year A.D. 1880 and that is now being carried to all nations by a
+holy ministry.
+
+The nature of this restoration work is clearly shown. Its leading
+feature is its missionary character, the proclamation of the pure gospel
+to "every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people." Since the days
+of the apostles the whole gospel has not been boldly declared and
+carried forward with burning missionary zeal. Romanism and Protestantism
+have conducted their missionary work and, according to chap. 16:14,
+their sphere of influence will extend throughout "the whole world"; but
+here is clearly set forth the fact that God has authorized another
+universal message and world-wide work wholly distinguished from all
+others. The contrast between the worshipers of the beast and his image
+and those composing the redeemed company on Mount Sion is so clear, also
+the nature of the work done by each, that we can not possibly identify
+them as being one.
+
+This work of conducting a world-wide missionary enterprise may appear to
+be a gigantic task, but the seeming impossibility vanishes when we
+consider the fact (to be more fully developed hereafter) that God calls
+into this service all his people who are yet under the sectarian yoke.
+With this great host already dispersed over the world, the work of
+making known this last message can and will be accomplished.
+
+The positive statement that the _hour_ of his judgment is come shows
+that the end is exceedingly near; hence the second and third angels must
+follow the first in the closest proximity possible in order to introduce
+their messages before the wrath of God is poured out upon apostate
+Christendom. The time is so short that these three messengers can not
+possibly refer to three distinct reformations in the world; hence they
+must signify three important phases in the one last reformation that
+carries the gospel to all nations in the short period of an "hour,"
+which time also includes the final judgment.
+
+A careful study of these three messages will show that they are
+inseparably connected. The second cry was against Babylon, that she had
+fallen. Rev. 18:1, 2 proves this fall of Babylon to be a moral one--a
+giving away to ungodliness, iniquity and all manner of deception.
+According to chapter 16:19 the great city of Babylon is composed of
+three parts, being a confederation of the dragon[10] (heathenism), the
+beast (Catholicism), and the false prophet (Protestantism). Chap. 16:13,
+14. It is evidently to this latter division of Babylon that this second
+message applies; for Paganism was always a false religion, and
+Catholicism was always a corrupt one, during whose reign the church of
+God, as already shown, was separate. Protestantism, then, was the only
+part of the great city that could fall morally or spiritually. During
+the space of three hundred and fifty years, from the formation of the
+first Protestant creed, she held reign and authority over the people of
+God, who were scattered among her hundreds of opposing sects.
+
+[Footnote 10: That the dragon should be a part of great Babylon seems at
+first improbable; but in this statement reference is made, not to the
+dragon in his original, or Pagan, state, but to the form in which he is
+manifesting himself in these last days to deceive the nations, working
+in conjunction with apostate Christendom. This phase of the dragon power
+which brings him into harmony with, and, in reality, a part of, modern
+Babylon, will be more clearly understood when we come to consider the
+three unclean spirits that come out of the mouth of the dragon, the
+beast, and the false prophet (chap. 16:13, 14), and the release of the
+dragon in chapter 20:7-9.]
+
+In this condition the faithful children of God, although bearing the
+mark and name of the beast, longed for restoration of the divine,
+primitive standard; but in the cloudy atmosphere of that period they
+could not clearly discern the whole truth. Later, when the full tidings
+of the everlasting gospel came, there came also a revelation that
+Babylon is fallen and that God is calling his people out of confusion
+just before the end of time.
+
+I call to witness every child of God who has been with the present
+reformation from its beginning, if there were not three special phases
+of the development of the truth, as follows: 1. A wonderful revival of
+spirituality among a few of God's chosen ones, caused by the
+"everlasting gospel" being revealed to them as never before. 2. The
+knowledge of the truth and deep experience thus obtained prepared the
+way for the next step, which was the discovery that the "churches" were
+a part of the great Babylon of Revelation and were in a fallen
+condition, "a hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of every unclean and
+hateful bird." Chap. 18:2, 3. Hence the cry went up, "Babylon is fallen,
+is fallen." 3. Then followed immediately the message to God's people to
+"flee out of the midst of Babylon and deliver every man his soul,"
+warning them that no one could any longer bear the mark of the beast or
+worship his image without forfeiting eternal salvation and that the
+fearful judgments of heaven would soon descend upon every one who
+refused to obey the message and to walk in the light. The last two
+phases, which apply to Babylon, are the same and in the same order as
+the description given in chapter 18:1-4. First, an angel from heaven
+cries mightily with a strong voice, "Babylon the great is fallen, is
+fallen"; and then "_another voice_" from heaven says, "COME OUT OF HER,
+MY PEOPLE." The three successive phases of the message are now all
+combined in one, and God is gathering his holy remnant "out of all
+places where they have been scattered in the cloudy and dark day" (Ezek.
+34:12) into the one body of Jesus Christ. Halleluiah! John, also, saw
+this glorious result of the three messages--"And I saw as it were a sea
+of glass mingled with fire: and them that had gotten the victory over
+the beast, and over his image, and over his mark, and over the number of
+his name, stand on the sea of glass, having the harps of God. And they
+sung the song of Moses the servant of God [a song of deliverance], and
+the song of the Lamb [the song of redemption], saying, Great and
+marvelous are thy works, Lord God Almighty; just and true are thy ways,
+thou king of saints." Chap. 15:2, 3. Let all the people of God rejoice!
+
+ "Hail the day so long expected,
+ Hail the year of full release;
+ Zion's walls are now erected,
+ And the watchmen publish peace.
+
+ "Now on Shiloh's wide dominion,
+ Hear the trumpets loudly roar:
+ Babylon's fallen, is fallen, is fallen,
+ Babylon's fallen to rise no more."
+
+Those of the Lord's people who through lack of sufficient light were
+yoked up with unbelievers in Protestantism, labored faithfully to
+upbuild the very sectarian institutions that God was against and that
+were destined to be destroyed, though they themselves were saved as by
+fire; but from the time this reformation began the redeemed die in the
+triumphs of a living faith, and their labors in upbuilding the true
+cause and kingdom of God are still blessed and fruitful, being
+perpetuated in the works that follow them.
+
+"Here is the patience of the saints; here are they that keep the
+commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus." As before mentioned, God's
+people during the reign of Romanism expected her universal supremacy to
+come to an end, and their patience was greatly exercised in waiting for
+the appointed time to arrive. It came with a great spiritual
+reformation. Then followed another period of apostasy, during which time
+God's people again looked forward to something better in the future.
+Many remarkable predictions of this present holiness reformation were
+uttered by some of the most spiritual saints during the Protestant era,
+and I can not refrain from mentioning a few of them in this connection.
+
+D'Aubigne: "The nineteenth century is called to resume the work which
+the sixteenth century was unable to accomplish." History of the
+Reformation, Book XV, Chap. 1.
+
+Fletcher: "Only He will come with more mercy, and will increase the
+light that shall be at eventide, according to his promise in Zech. 14:7.
+I should rather think that the visions are not yet plainly disclosed;
+and that the day and hour in which the Lord will begin to make bare his
+arm openly are still concealed from us. Oh, when will the communion of
+saints be complete? Lord, hasten the time; and let me have a place among
+them that love thee, and love one another in sincerity." This is an
+extract from a letter written by John Fletcher to Mr. Wesley, dated
+London, May 26, 1757, as given in Joseph Benson's life of Fletcher, pp.
+39, 40.
+
+D'Aubigne again: "In every age it has been seen how great is the
+strength of an idea to penetrate the masses, to stir nations, and to
+hurry them, if required, by thousands to the battle-field and to death.
+But if so great be the strength of a human idea, what power must not a
+heaven-descended idea possess, when God opens to it the gates of the
+heart! The world has not often seen so much power at work; it was seen,
+however, in the early days of Christianity, and in the time of the
+Reformation; and _it will be seen in future_ ages." Book VI, Chap. 12.
+
+"It has been said that the three last centuries, the sixteenth, the
+seventeenth, and the eighteenth, may be conceived as an immense battle
+of three days' duration. We willingly adopt this beautiful
+comparison.... The first day was the battle of God, the second the
+battle of the priest, the third the battle of reason. What will be the
+fourth? In our opinion, the confused strife, the deadly contest of all
+these powers together, to _end in the victory of Him to whom triumph
+belongs_." Book XI, Chap. 9.
+
+Lorenzo Dow, comment on Rev. 14:6-11; 18:1-5: "The angel, or
+extraordinary messenger, with his assistants, proclaiming the fall of
+Babylon will be known in his time. Also the one warning the people of
+God to come out of Babylon literally, spiritually, and practically, will
+be known also, and such other threatening for the omission of compliance
+is not to be found in all the Bible." Dow's Works, p. 533.
+
+The following extracts are from an old book written about 1812 by
+Theophilus R. Gates and entitled "Truth Advocated." Through the kindness
+of a sister living in Allegan County, Michigan, the writer was enabled
+to secure the following from the only copy of this book known to be in
+existence--she having borrowed it of her neighbor, a relative of its
+author.
+
+On Rev. 14:11: "I would here gladly drop the subject, lest I give
+offense; but duty compels me to remark, what can not be denied, that an
+inordinate attachment to certain systems and forms of religion, has
+occasioned all the strifes, animosities, and persecutions, that have so
+long agitated the Christian world; and if God be just, every one must
+drink of the cup of his indignation, according to his offense. The beast
+and his image, as it exists in Protestant countries, seems in this place
+particularly meant; and our own land is full of the number of his name.
+That such a testimony will one day go forth we must believe, or else St.
+John saw that which will never be: and the testimony will as certainly
+be received; for a company in the next chapter are to be seen that had
+gotten the victory over the beast, his image, his mark, and the number
+of his name. It is also equally true that as yet it has never gone
+forth; and that at the time, great afflictions or suffering of some kind
+will be undergone to exercise the patience of the saints.... It is at
+this very time, no doubt, that the three unclean spirits, like frogs,
+come out of the mouth of the dragon, the beast, and the false prophet;
+spirits of devils working miracles, which go forth unto the kings of the
+earth, and of the whole world, to gather them to the great battle of the
+great day of God Almighty. The greatest possible efforts, indeed will
+now be made by all the sectarians to keep up their existence ... nor is
+it any wonder that hireling ministers and system worshipers, Demetrius
+like, should be stirred up and raise no small stir about the way; for it
+is evident, not only their craft is in danger of being set at naught by
+this testimony, but also the great Diana of systems and forms of
+religion to be despised, and their magnificence destroyed, whom now
+almost the whole Christian world worshipeth." Pp. 281-283.
+
+"And now commences an era of light and suffering, when the corrupt
+churches (with the kings of the earth and great men united with them)
+being about to be wholly brought down, make one general muster against
+Christ and his true worshipers. These things are clear to me as a ray of
+light; and whoever lives at this time will see as great opposition and
+spite to the true way of righteousness then set forth from sectarians
+and professors generally, as there was from the Jews towards Christ and
+his testimony: and also, like the Jews, at the very time they oppose the
+true way of the Lord with all their might, they will no doubt make the
+greatest possible show of religion, will think they are the true church,
+yea will have a zeal for God, carrying on religion with great success,
+forming societies, sending missionaries among the heathen, etc., etc.
+That such an event will take place is very clear." Pp. 286-288.
+
+"This happy period I never expect to see: but known unto the Lord only
+are all things. I know that such a time will be; for we are assured by
+the angel, these are the true sayings of God: and I also believe that it
+will take place _within two centuries_ from this time. But oh! how
+corrupt doth the world now appear to me.... Help me, O Lord, I pray
+thee, to do thy will.
+
+"Whenever any body of people come into notice, establish their rules and
+institutions, and become a respectable sect, they are the people of God
+then only in name; they cease to have the nature any longer; and whoever
+unites himself to the same, constitutes himself one of the beast's
+party, and so far as his influence extends, he helps to establish the
+kingdom of Antichrist in the earth. This is clear from the prophecies of
+the Revelation, and it will answer no purpose to take offense when the
+truth is spoken. These things will, moreover, sooner or later be
+declared with great plainness by some one; and then will the man of sin
+put forth all his strength; then will persecution come, and the beast
+muster his armies to defend himself and to destroy the assailants, but
+in vain; for however few their number may be at first, and however
+furious the battle may rage against them, they are destined to conquer.
+And herein the words of Christ will fitly apply, 'Fear not, little
+flock; for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom.'"
+P. 313.
+
+Speaking of sectarianism, he says further: "The same round of things
+will continue until the evil is remedied.... When this shall take place,
+time only can determine with certainty. It will probably commence
+slowly, and not come with any great outward observation. Few will at
+first see or embrace the way, being strange to them, and appearing on
+account of their prejudices, and the way they have been taught by the
+false prophet, to be wrong and improper: moreover, being opposed to all
+others, they will have all others to oppose them. But though they are
+despised and hated, and few in number, the Lord is with them." Pp. 322,
+323.
+
+On Rev. 16:13, 14: "I have already delivered my views with respect to
+these unclean spirits ... and it is not necessary to say much here upon
+the subject; only I would just observe, that this will be a time of
+greater trial to Christians in general, and in a time in which more will
+be deprived of every particle of true religion through the influence of
+false ministers belonging to the different societies in Christendom,
+than any that has ever yet been in the world. But while they are making
+these great exertions, they are only preparing themselves and their
+deluded votaries for a more awful and complete destruction. For God
+Almighty is against them, and they against Him; though they will know it
+not, but think perhaps all the while they are his peculiar favorites,
+and that they are employed in maintaining his cause, like the Jews
+before them, when it is only their own cause and men's traditions." P.
+338.
+
+"I am but as the voice of one crying in the wilderness of error and of
+sin, of wickedness and delusion, testifying according to the best light
+given me; and any light that I can possibly communicate will in a little
+time become as the feeble shining of the sun, by reason of the greatness
+of the light that shall be hereafter." P. 354.
+
+"A true and living testimony will go forth before this last period of
+the awful judgments of God comes to a close, and in consequence of
+rejecting it, like the Jews of old, the wrath of God will come upon them
+to the uttermost. The testimony against the worshipers of the beast, by
+the third angel, Rev. 14:9, is the testimony that effectually overthrows
+the kingdom of darkness and establishes the truth as it is in Jesus,
+pure and undefiled.... The authors of this testimony will ... unlike to
+all who go before them, attack the evil at its root, and expose the
+deceit, hypocrisy and wickedness of the different sects in a way that
+has never before been done; for which they will suffer the greatest
+persecution. You may look upon these things as the reveries of my own
+fancy; but some day or other, people will witness to the truth of what I
+now write." Pp. 421, 422.
+
+"All the reformations which go before this last great reform will only
+be partial and temporary. They will only lop off the branches, or at the
+most, only strike at the body of the corrupt tree, while the roots
+remain untouched and uninjured. But when this last testimony goes forth,
+the very roots of the corrupt tree will be attacked." P. 426.
+
+"Every sect is under an idea that whenever the Lord comes to establish
+truth in the earth, it will be to establish their creed, raise up their
+sect, and bring the whole world into their way. And when the faithful
+witnesses whom God will raise up shall openly declare that they have all
+gone out of the way, that the greatest professors have so much of guile,
+selfishness and party spirit about them as to be nothing but hypocrites,
+and that a person must be better than they are or be lost forever; that
+sects are an abomination to the Lord; denounce eternal death upon every
+advocate and adherent of men-made establishments; ... I say when such a
+testimony as this goes forth, as it sooner or later will, no wonder that
+the sects, all with one accord, should set themselves against it--should
+call it heresy--declare it will ruin the churches if it is not
+suppressed.... Although, as I have before testified, I am only as the
+voice of one crying in the wilderness--a mere babe in the knowledge of
+these things which are to be revealed hereafter, yet I expect to raise a
+host of bigots and hypocrites against me.... Nor can it be very long
+before the true light, in a very especial manner, will shine.... If
+these things do not come to pass, then let me be called an enthusiast or
+a deceiver." Pp. 444-446.
+
+ 14. And I looked, and behold a white cloud, and upon the cloud
+ one sat like unto the Son of man, having on his head a golden
+ crown, and in his hand a sharp sickle.
+
+ 15. And another angel came out of the temple, crying with a loud
+ voice to him that sat on the cloud, Thrust in thy sickle, and
+ reap: for the time has come for thee to reap; for the harvest of
+ the earth is ripe.
+
+ 16. And he that sat on the cloud thrust in his sickle on the
+ earth; and the earth was reaped.
+
+ 17. And another angel came out of the temple which is in heaven,
+ he also having a sharp sickle.
+
+ 18. And another angel came out from the altar, which had power
+ over fire; and cried with a loud cry to him that had the sharp
+ sickle, saying, Thrust in thy sharp sickle, and gather the
+ clusters of the vine of the earth; for her grapes are fully
+ ripe.
+
+ 19. And the angel thrust in his sickle into the earth, and
+ gathered the vine of the earth, and cast it into the great
+ winepress of the wrath of God.
+
+ 20. And the winepress was trodden without the city, and blood
+ came out of the winepress, even unto the horse bridles, by the
+ space of a thousand and six hundred furlongs.
+
+The special characters of this vision and their work have been very
+difficult for me to identify positively. Until clearer light on the
+matter is received, I choose to withhold an explanation rather than to
+indulge in speculation. Its usual explanation is to apply the gathering
+of the harvest of the earth to the work of the reformation now taking
+place and the vintage scene to the final destruction of the wicked,
+their punishment being symbolized by the treading of the "winepress of
+the wrath of God." This may be its signification. It is certain,
+however, that in a subsequent chapter, the final judgment of the wicked
+is symbolized by the treading of "the wine-press of the fierceness and
+wrath of Almighty God." Beyond this I can not now speak with certainty.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+ And I saw another sign in heaven, great and marvelous, seven
+ angels having the seven last plagues; for in them is filled up
+ the wrath of God.
+
+ 2. And I saw as it were a sea of glass mingled with fire: and
+ them that had gotten the victory over the beast, and over his
+ image, and over his mark, and over the number of his name, stand
+ on the sea of glass, having the harps of God.
+
+ 3. And they sing the song of Moses the servant of God, and the
+ song of the Lamb, saying, Great and marvellous are thy works,
+ Lord God Almighty; just and true are thy ways, thou King of
+ saints.
+
+ 4. Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? for
+ thou only art holy: for all nations shall come and worship
+ before thee; for thy judgments are made manifest:
+
+ 5. And after that I looked, and, behold, the temple of the
+ tabernacle of the testimony in heaven was opened:
+
+ 6. And the seven angels came out of the temple, having the seven
+ plagues, clothed in pure and white linen, and having their
+ breasts girded with golden girdles.
+
+ 7. And one of the four beasts gave unto the seven angels seven
+ golden vials full of the wrath of God, who liveth for ever and
+ ever.
+
+ 8. And the temple was filled with smoke from the glory of God,
+ and from his power; and no man was able to enter into the
+ temple, till the seven plagues of the seven angels were
+ fulfilled.
+
+The scene presented to us in this vision is but an introduction to the
+solemn scenes of awful judgment immediately following. The first thing
+that attracted John's attention was a sign, great and marvelous, "seven
+angels having the seven last plagues." The reason why these are
+denominated the "last plagues" is because that "in them is filled up the
+wrath of God." These are the completion, then, the finishing up of the
+work of divine judgment against the persecutors of the church. When the
+last one is poured out the work is done, the time of judgment is over.
+These angels are not designed to symbolize any agencies on earth, for
+they do not appear on earth; they are simply the conductors of the
+Revelation. God never commissions his people on earth to perform such
+great judgments upon their persecutors as the temporal judgments of the
+seven last plagues will be shown to be; but, on the contrary, he has
+given them the express command not to avenge themselves, but to suffer
+wrong. He himself lays exclusive claim to this prerogative, saying,
+"Vengeance is _mine_; I will repay, saith the Lord." Rom. 12:19.
+
+As soon as the subject of the plagues is introduced and before they are
+poured out, the narrative suddenly changes and a short history of God's
+redeemed saints is given. This, perhaps, thus occurs for two reasons--to
+assist us in fixing the chronology of the events described and to
+encourage us with the thought that, even while the awful judgments of
+God are being "made manifest" upon the haughty oppressors of earth, God
+has a chosen people who have "gotten the victory over the beast, and
+over his image, and over his mark, and over the number of his name."
+They stand upon the "sea of glass, having the harps of God"--a symbol of
+melody and praise--and sing the song of Moses and the song of the Lamb.
+The song of Moses was that sung by the Israelites when they had escaped
+to the further side of the Red Sea, thus securing perfect deliverance
+from their enemies. So, also, this company of worshipers sing a great
+song of deliverance--deliverance from the beast and his image. In
+chapters 4 and 5 John saw the great host redeemed before the apostasy
+standing on this sea of glass, singing the song of redemption--the song
+of the Lamb--but this company are enabled to sing another song as
+well--the song of deliverance--for they have "gotten the victory over
+the beast, and over his image, and over his mark, and over the number of
+his name." Halleluiah! "Great and marvelous are thy works, Lord God
+Almighty; just and true are thy ways, thou King of saints."
+
+As before stated (chap. 8:3), the heavenly world as opened up to John
+appeared symbolized after the sanctuary of the temple. By "the temple of
+the tabernacle of the testimony," out of which the seven angels came
+fully prepared for their work, is meant the most holy place of the
+sanctuary, called "the tabernacle of the testimony" because there was
+deposited in it, beneath the wings of the cherubim, the ark of the
+testimony, or God's covenant. It was therefore as from the most holy
+place of the sanctuary--from the very presence of the Deity--that these
+angels went forth commissioned to execute the seven last plagues. This
+shows that they went by the divine command as ministers of vengeance.
+The purity and beauty of their attire denoted both the spotless
+excellency of their characters and the justice of the work in which they
+were to engage. Although theirs was a work of awful avenging judgment,
+still the garments they wore would not be soiled thereby; and their
+flowing robes of white were girded up with a beautiful golden girdle.
+Therefore there is no inconsistency between the purity and love of God
+and the work of his vengeance. It would seem to human reasoning that the
+two are irreconcilable, but these symbols teach differently.
+
+These angels received their vials (goblets) of wrath at the hands of one
+of the four living creatures, who are symbols of the redeemed sons of
+earth. Their deliverance by one of these doubtless denotes that these
+judgments were to be executed in their behalf and in answer to their
+prayers. For centuries the wrath of deadly persecutors had been poured
+out upon God's people, until the cry ascended from the lips of the
+martyrs, "How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge and
+avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth?" Chap. 6:10. Now their
+prayer is answered, and by their hand, as it were, the vials of wrath
+are delivered with the divine sanction unto the seven angels to be
+poured out upon these proud oppressors of the Lord's people. These
+vials, too, were "full of wrath." What a fearful expression! _Full of
+wrath_, even "_the wrath of God_, who liveth forever and ever." There
+was nothing in them but wrath and that to the very brim.
+
+As soon as the vials were delivered, "the temple was filled with smoke
+from the glory of God." This symbol is taken from the Shekinah which
+filled the ancient tabernacle. We read that when the tabernacle was
+finished, "a cloud covered the tent of the congregation, and the glory
+of the Lord filled the tabernacle. And Moses was not able to enter into
+the tent of the congregation, because the cloud abode thereon, and the
+glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle." Ex. 40:34, 35. The same thing
+occurred at the dedication of Solomon's temple. "The cloud filled the
+house of the Lord, so that the priests could not stand to minister
+because of the cloud: for the glory of the Lord had filled the house of
+the Lord." 1 Kings 8:10, 11. So, also, in the symbol before us the glory
+of God filled the temple so that no man was able to enter. This is
+intended to set forth the fact that these avenging judgments were for
+the manifestation of the divine glory and that there was no access to
+the throne of God nor to his mercy-seat to alter them or to stay their
+execution. Such is the sublime scene presented to our view preparatory
+to the pouring out of the seven last great plagues.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+ And I heard a great voice out of the temple saying to the seven
+ angels, Go your ways, and pour out the vials of the wrath of God
+ upon the earth.
+
+ 2. And the first went, and poured out his vial upon the earth;
+ and there fell a noisome and grievous sore upon the men which
+ had the mark of the beast, and upon them which worshipped his
+ image.
+
+A great voice out of the temple, now filled with the glory of the divine
+presence, commanded the seven angels to enter upon their mission. It
+came, therefore, from God, who alone fixed the time for these judgments
+to begin.
+
+Before an intelligent explanation of these plagues can be given,
+however, the following points must be made clear: 1. _Where_ the vials
+were poured out. 2. _Upon whom_ they were emptied. 3. _Why_ they were
+thus poured out. 4. _When_ they were fulfilled, or, rather, at what time
+they began to be fulfilled. These points we will first briefly consider
+in the order named, after which we will discuss the _nature_ of the
+plagues and their individual application.
+
+1. The place where these vials of wrath were poured out was "upon the
+earth"; that is, the Apocalyptic earth, or that portion of the earth
+made the special subject of Apocalyptic vision; namely, the territory of
+the ten kingdoms. The last two vials, however, will be found to embrace
+a larger territory.
+
+2. They were poured out upon those "which had the mark of the beast, and
+upon them which worshiped his image." It has already been shown that the
+image made by the second beast of chapter 13 was the Protestant
+ecclesiastical organizations; hence the "beast" here referred to, to
+which the image was made, must signify the ecclesiastical hierarchy of
+Rome, the original. So the plagues fell upon the adherents of both
+organized Romanism and Protestantism in Europe.
+
+3. The reason why the judgments of the first three vials especially
+descended upon them was because "they had shed the blood of saints and
+prophets." Verse 6. That Romanism was a fierce oppressor of God's people
+has already been noticed: Protestantism as their persecutor, also, must
+now be considered further. Protestant sects after they first became
+established and got power in their own hands, acted much in the same
+manner as the church of Rome did before them, persecuting, banishing,
+imprisoning, and even putting to death those who refused to receive
+their tenets or to conform to the system of religion they had adopted.
+The Lutherans, at first a pious, persecuted people, on becoming numerous
+and exalted by the favor of the great, established a certain system of
+religion and then, when it was in their power, persecuted, imprisoned,
+banished, or put to death all that dissented. As early after the
+Reformation as 1574, in a convention at Torgaw, they established the
+real presence in the eucharist and instigated the Elector of Saxony to
+seize, imprison, and banish all the secret Calvinists that differed from
+them in sentiment, and to reduce their followers by every act of
+violence, to renounce their sentiments and to confess the ubiquity.
+Peucer, for his opinions, suffered ten years of imprisonment in the
+severest manner. In 1577 a form of concord was produced in which the
+real manducation of Christ's body and blood in the eucharist was
+established and heresy and excommunication laid on all that refused this
+as an article of faith, with pains and penalties to be enforced by the
+secular arm. Crellius, in 1601, was put to death.
+
+In Switzerland, before the city of Zurich was entirely safe itself from
+the encroachments of Romanism, its Protestant council condemned a young
+man named Felix Mantz to be drowned because he insisted that the
+baby-sprinkling of Romanism was not baptism and that all who had
+received the rite ought to be immersed. This sentence was carried into
+effect. The severest laws were passed in different countries of Europe
+against the Anabaptists, and large numbers were banished or burnt at the
+stake. See Encyclopaedia Britannica, Art. Anabaptists. Protestants may
+claim this was because of their fanaticism on other lines; but it
+remains a fact, nevertheless, that the chief sentiment at the base of
+these laws was religious persecution and that Protestants sanctioned and
+carried them into execution.
+
+King Henry VIII., the founder of the Established Church in England,
+adopted the most stringent laws to enforce its doctrines. Certain
+articles of religion were drawn up, known in history as the "Bloody Six
+Articles." Concerning these the People's Cyclopaedia says: "The doctrines
+were substantially those of the Roman Catholic Church. Whoever denied
+the first articles (that embodying the doctrine of transubstantiation)
+was to be declared a heretic, and burnt without opportunity of
+abjuration; whoso spoke against the other five articles should, for the
+first offense, forfeit his property; and whosoever refused to abjure his
+first offense, or committed a second, was to die like a felon." Art.
+Henry VIII. "The royal reformer persecuted alike Catholics and
+Protestants. Thus, on one occasion, three Catholics who denied that the
+king was the rightful head of the church, and three Protestants who
+disputed the doctrine of the real presence in the sacrament,... were
+dragged on the same sled to the place of execution." In speaking of that
+period of history and of the religious persecutions of the times, Myers
+says: "Punishment of heresy was then regarded, by both Catholics and
+Protestants alike, as a duty which could be neglected by those in
+authority only at the peril of Heaven's displeasure. Believing this,
+those of that age could consistently do nothing less than labor to
+exterminate heresy with axe, sword and fagot." General History, p. 553.
+
+That religious intolerance even at a later date was practised in
+England, witness the twelve years' imprisonment of John Bunyan and the
+hundreds confined in jails throughout that country for not conforming to
+the established religion. It was such severe persecution by that early
+Protestant sect that drove the Puritans from England's fair country to
+the then inhospitable shores of America, that they might have an
+opportunity to worship God according to the dictates of their own
+conscience. In Scotland the Covenanters "insisted on their right to
+worship God in their own way. They were therefore subjected to most
+cruel and unrelenting persecution. They were hunted by English troopers
+over their native moors and among the wild recesses of their mountains,
+whither they secretly retired for prayer and worship. The tales of the
+suffering of the Scotch Covenanters at the hands of the English
+Protestants form a most harrowing chapter of the records of the ages of
+religious persecution." This list might be considerably augmented, but
+it is unnecessary. However, that Protestant persecution and tyranny
+should never reach the enormous extent of the Romanists before them is
+proved by the fact that her horns were "like a lamb." Chap. 13:11.
+
+4. It is very important for us to ascertain the _time_ for the beginning
+of these plagues; for they can not be identified unless we understand
+the chronology of the events described. It is a fact no one can question
+that the seventh plague is the judgment of the last day, for in the
+seven "is filled up" the wrath of God; hence they are denominated the
+_last_ plagues. It is also a fact, well-known to all who are spiritual
+and who understand the truth in the present reformation, that certain
+events said to occur under the period of the sixth plague are _now_
+taking place; namely, the confederation of all false religions to oppose
+the people of God, led on by the "unclean spirits" that come "out of the
+mouth of the dragon, and out of the mouth of the beast, and out of the
+mouth of the false prophet." Verses 13, 14.
+
+Therefore five of the plagues precede the time in which we are now
+living. It is evident that the plagues could not begin before the
+reformation; for the vials were poured out upon the "image of the
+beast"--Protestantism--also. Hence we are directed to some period
+between the sixteenth century and the present day for their
+commencement. The reason _why_ the first judgments especially were
+poured out will assist us in determining the starting-point--"They have
+shed the blood of saints and prophets." This expression seems to
+indicate that the time for the plagues to begin was after Romanism and
+Protestantism ceased putting people to death because of their religious
+sentiments. That this is the correct idea is clearly proved by what was
+said to the martyrs when they cried unto God for the avenging of their
+blood on them that dwell on the earth. "And it was said unto them, that
+they should rest yet for a little season, until their fellow-servants
+also and their brethren, that should be killed as they were, should be
+fulfilled." Chap. 6:10, 11. For additional information concerning the
+terrible persecutions that followed the Sixteenth Century Reformation,
+see remarks on chapter 6:10, 11.
+
+We must now determine about what time the great persecutions referred to
+ceased, or nearly ceased, and that will give us the right starting-point
+from which to reckon the pouring out of the first vial. In A.D. 1685 the
+revocation of the Edict of Nantes, by Louis XIV. of France, took place,
+and in the terrible persecutions that occurred during his reign three
+hundred thousand are said to have lost their lives. The time that we are
+endeavoring to establish, then, must be later than the seventeenth
+century. Louis died in 1714. Persecutions continued from time to time in
+France, with considerable severity, until about the middle of the
+century. "Soon after this ... the flowing of heretic blood ceased,
+though an effort was made in 1765 by the Popish clergy to resist the
+tendency to toleration by a remonstrance to the king." History of
+Romanism, p. 608. A few individual cases of persecution may have
+occurred later in other countries; but in the main we are safe in
+pointing to about the middle of the eighteenth century for the general
+cessation of these religious _murders_. We will now consider the nature
+of the first plague.
+
+The pouring out of this vial produced the most painful malignant ulcers
+upon the human body. Such ulcers are evidently not political calamities;
+for the symbol is drawn, not from nature, but from human life. Still, it
+is not drawn from a human being as a whole (in which case religious
+events would be symbolized), but only from his body. What, then, is the
+analagous object of which the human body may stand as a proper
+representative? Evidently, the mind. We would naturally pass from the
+bodily to the mental; and what painful ulcers are to the one, marring
+its beauty and filling it with burning anguish, such are blasphemous
+opinions and malignant principles to the other.
+
+Considering the time for this plague pointed out above, the student of
+Revelation who is acquainted with the history of the past will scarcely
+fail to discern at once, in the striking points of this symbol, those
+horrible principles of infidelity, atheism, and licentiousness, which
+were spread so extensively over Europe during the latter half of the
+eighteenth century, and which were the most efficient causes in bringing
+about the fearful convulsions which followed in the French Revolution.
+That all may understand this matter in its proper light, however, it
+will be necessary to state some of the facts respecting this "noisome
+and grievous sore" that fell at that time upon the inhabitants of
+Europe. In writing upon the causes that led up to the French Revolution,
+Mr. Wickes gathered the following facts of history mainly from the
+Encyclopaedia of Religious Knowledge, under the articles headed
+_Philosophists_ and _Illuminati_. I will quote his own language, as it
+is very pointed.
+
+"Philosophists was a name given to several persons in France, who
+entered into a combination to overthrow the religion of Jesus, and
+eradicate from the human heart every religious sentiment. The man more
+particularly to whom this idea first occurred, was Voltaire, who being
+weary (as he said himself) of hearing it repeated that twelve men were
+sufficient to establish Christianity, resolved to prove that one might
+be sufficient to overturn it. Full of this project, he swore, before the
+year 1730, to devote his life to its accomplishment, and for some time
+he flattered himself that he should enjoy alone the glory of destroying
+the Christian religion. He found, however, that associates would be
+necessary; and from the numerous tribe of his admirers and disciples, he
+chose D'Alembert and Diderot, as the most proper persons to co-operate
+with him in his designs. He contrived also to enlist Frederick II., king
+of Prussia, who became one of his most zealous coadjutors, until he
+found that Voltaire was waging war with the throne as well as the altar.
+This, indeed, was not originally Voltaire's intention. He was vain; from
+natural disposition an aristocrat, and an admirer of royalty. But when
+he found that almost every sovereign but Frederick disapproved of his
+ambitious designs, as soon as he perceived their issue, he determined to
+oppose all the governments on earth rather than forfeit the glory with
+which he flattered himself, of vanquishing Christ and his apostles in
+the field of controversy.
+
+"He now set himself, with his associates, D'Alembert and Diderot, to
+excite universal discontent with the established order of things. For
+this purpose, they formed secret societies, assumed new names, and
+employed an enigmatical language. In their secret meetings they
+professed to celebrate the mysteries of _Mythra_; and their great
+object, as they professed to one another, was to confound the wretch,
+meaning Jesus Christ. Hence their secret watchword was 'Crush the
+wretch.' The following are some of their doctrines, as found in their
+books expressly designed for general circulation. Sometimes standing out
+in their naked horror, at other times enveloped in sophistry and
+disguise. The Universal Cause, that God of the philosophers, of the
+Jews, and of the Christians, is but a chimera and a phantom--The
+phenomena of nature only prove the existence of God to a few
+prepossessed men--It is more reasonable to admit, with Manes, of a
+two-fold God, than of the God of Christianity--We can not know whether a
+God really exists, or whether there is any difference between good and
+evil, or vice and virtue--Nothing can be more absurd than to believe the
+soul a spiritual being--The immortality of the soul, so far from
+stimulating men to the practise of virtue, is nothing but a barbarous,
+desperate, fatal tenet, and contrary to all legislation--All ideas of
+justice and injustice, of virtue and vice, of glory and infamy, are
+purely arbitrary, and dependent on custom--Conscience and remorse are
+nothing but the foresight of those physical penalties to which crimes
+expose us--The man who is above the law, can commit, without remorse,
+the dishonest act that may serve his purpose--The fear of God, so far
+from being the beginning of wisdom, should be the beginning of
+folly--The command to love one's parents is more the work of education
+than of nature--Modesty is only an invention of refined
+voluptuousness--The law which condemns married people to live together,
+becomes barbarous and cruel on the day they cease to love one another.
+
+"Such were the atrocious sentiments, though sometimes artfully veiled,
+which were disseminated in their books, and which, spreading all over
+Europe, imperceptibly took possession of the public mind, and prepared
+the way for the subversion of religion, morals, and government. As soon
+as the sale of the works was sufficient to pay expenses, inferior
+editions were printed and given away, or sold at a very low price;
+circulating libraries of them were formed, and reading societies
+instituted. While they constantly denied these productions to the world,
+they contrived to give them a false celebrity through their confidential
+agents and correspondents, who were not themselves always trusted with
+the entire secret.
+
+"By degrees they got possession nearly of all the reviews and periodical
+publications; established a general intercourse, by means of hawkers and
+pedlars, with the distant provinces; and instituted an office to supply
+all schools with teachers; and thus did they acquire unprecedented
+dominion over every species of literature, over the minds of all ranks
+of people, and the education of the youth, without giving any alarm to
+the world. The lovers of wit and polite literature were caught by
+Voltaire; the men of science were perverted, and children corrupted in
+the first rudiments of learning, by D'Alembert and Diderot; stronger
+appetites were fed by the secret club of Baron Holbach; the imaginations
+of the higher orders were set dangerously afloat by Montesquieu; and the
+multitude of all ranks was surprised, confounded, and hurried away by
+Rousseau. Thus was the public mind in France completely corrupted, and
+the way prepared for the dreadful scenes that followed."
+
+But there is also another chapter to the dark history of this "noisome
+and grievous sore." The same author says again:
+
+"After Voltaire had broached his system of infidel philosophy, and
+brought it unto perfection, it was taken up by the celebrated Dr. Adam
+Weishaupt, professor of canon law in the University of Ingolstadt, and
+by him perfected as a system of light or illuminism. On the 1st of May,
+1776, he founded, among the students of the above-named University, a
+secret society under the name of the _Illuminati_, whose avowed object
+was to diffuse the light of science, these secret societies being so
+many radiating centers of light. But the science taught was the most
+atrocious infidelity, and its object the overturning of all government
+and religion. Free masonry, being in high repute all over Europe when
+Weishaupt first formed the plan of his society, he availed himself of
+its secrecy to introduce his new order, which rapidly spread, by the
+efforts of its founders and disciples, through all those countries, and
+found its way even to the United States. It would not be possible here
+to give even an outline of the nature and constitution of this
+extraordinary society--of its secrets and mysteries--of the deep
+dissimulation, consummate hypocrisy, and shocking impiety of its founder
+and his associates--of their Jesuitical arts in concealing their real
+objects, and their incredible industry and astonishing exertions in
+making converts--of the absolute despotism and complete system of
+_espionage_ established throughout the order--of the blind obedience
+exacted of the _novices_, and the absolute power of life and death
+assumed by the order and conceded by the novices--of the pretended
+morality, real blasphemies, and absolute atheism of the founder and his
+tried friends. Reference can only be made to these things as
+well-established facts.
+
+"It is important here to bear in mind one or two facts, in order to
+realize what an engine of corruption this secret organization of the
+_Illuminati_ was. One fact is, the high popularity which these secret
+societies at that period enjoyed. It was unbounded. There is something
+which commends such secret organizations most powerfully to the depraved
+human nature. Men love them because they are secret, and because they
+can wield such tremendous power. The other fact to be considered, is the
+absence, to a such vast extent, of the controlling elements of true
+religion in the European mind, and its predisposition to skepticism. The
+Reformation of the Sixteenth Century had broken the shackles of priestly
+Papal superstition over the human mind; and [true] evangelical doctrine
+not being introduced to supply the vacuum, the mass swung readily over
+from the regions of dark superstition to blank atheism. Thus were the
+elements ready prepared to hand for such spirits as Voltaire,
+D'Alembert, Diderot, Weishaupt, and others, to work upon, and by reason
+of their secret powerful agencies, to mould to their own liking.
+
+"It was now this damning system of infidelity, under the specious name
+of philosophy, light, and science, spread with such untiring industry
+over the European mind, that unhinged the whole framework of society,
+and prepared it, like a vast magazine, for an awful explosion. All the
+principles that held society together in the fear of God and future
+retribution--regard for human law--respect for magistrates, parents, and
+the marriage-tie--yea, in the very distinctions of virtue and vice, had
+been unsettled or taken away. They had been reasoned down and laughed
+out of the world; and when these only restraints, which God has imposed
+upon human selfishness and passion were removed, what was then to hold
+back those fierce passions and that deep selfishness from the most
+unbounded excesses? God was no more feared--government was no more
+sacred--religion was a delusion--immorality was a lie--virtue was a
+name--the marriage-tie was a farce--modesty was refined voluptuousness:
+and when men were persuaded of these things, society began to roll and
+heave under the long swells of that portentous storm of wrath which was
+soon to break, in all its desolating fury, over the earth."
+
+In the facts here presented it may be seen how far we are justified in
+applying to them this first vial of wrath. The vial was poured out "upon
+the earth"--on the inhabitants of the ten kingdoms when in a state of
+tranquility. This was their condition, unsuspicious of danger, when the
+dread infection was spread through society. According to the testimony
+of Pres. Dwight, within ten years from the first establishment of the
+Illuminati, in 1776, "they were established in great numbers through
+Germany, Sweden, Prussia, Poland, Austria, Holland, France, Switzerland,
+Italy, England, Scotland, and America. They spread with a rapidity which
+nothing but fact could have induced any sober mind to believe."
+
+This system of infidelity is well symbolized by a noisome, grevious
+ulcer, which is loathsome to the sight, offensive to the smell,
+corrupting to the body, and productive of awful pain. That it appeared
+so to others besides the author of the Revelation is shown by the
+following epithets which Burke, the celebrated English orator, applied
+to the spirit of the French Revolution, which was only the discharged
+virus of these ulcers. He styled it "the fever of Jacobinism;" "the
+epidemic of atheistical fanaticism;" "an evil lying deep in the
+corruptions of human nature;" "such a plague, that the precaution of the
+most severe quarantine ought to be established against it." The result,
+he says, was "the corruption of all morals," "the decomposition of all
+society." What greater plague could fall upon Romanism and Protestantism
+than this fearful scourge of infidelity?
+
+I have dwelt for a considerable length of time upon this subject,
+because of its deep interest, and also because I desired to verify the
+application of the symbol as much as possible, on account of its close
+connection with the pouring out of the vials which follow.
+
+ 3. And the second angel poured out his vial upon the sea; and it
+ became as the blood of a dead man: and every living soul died in
+ the sea.
+
+This vial was poured out upon the "sea." The sea is a large body of
+water within the earth, subject to violent storms and agitations. As a
+symbol it would denote some central power or kingdom within the symbolic
+earth in a state of revolution. The effects produced by this vial were
+two-fold--the waters were changed into blood as of a dead man, and all
+the living creatures in the sea died. The waters of the sea represent
+the inhabitants of this kingdom (see a similar explanation of _water_ in
+chap. 17:15) as the earth does the inhabitants of the empire, or the ten
+kingdoms. The living creatures in the sea, therefore, could signify the
+rulers and princes of the kingdom, as they bear an analagous relation to
+the people that fishes do to the waters. The statement that the waters
+of the sea became "as the blood of a dead man" is doubtless intended to
+signify a much more dreadful state of things than if they had simply
+been changed to blood. They were converted into black and poisonous, or
+corrupt, blood. This denotes the vast slaughter and massacre of the
+inhabitants of this kingdom; while the death of the living creatures
+denotes the extinction of those in power.
+
+It may appear at first that making the conversion of water into blood a
+symbol of bloodshed is adopting the literal method of interpretation;
+but not so, and for the following reason: The symbol is taken from
+nature, the waters of the sea representing the inhabitants of the
+kingdom. The waters are changed into an unnatural state or element, that
+of blood, and this change denotes an analagous one passing upon the
+inhabitants. Their continuing in life would be their remaining as
+waters: their massacre and destruction would be the waters changed to
+blood--a horrible and unnatural element. Likewise, the death of the
+living things in the sea is a similar destruction overtaking the kings,
+rulers, and princes.
+
+With our understanding of the nature of the first vial, which prepared
+the way for the pouring out of this one, we shall have no difficulty
+whatever in identifying this symbol with the terrible convulsions of the
+French Revolution. It followed as a necessary consequence of the first.
+Voltaire and his coadjutors had insulted and trampled in the dust
+everything held sacred in human eyes, and this fully prepared the way
+for the scenes of terror that followed.
+
+In studying these vials the reader should bear in mind constantly the
+reason _why_ they were sent as judgments upon the nations of
+Europe--because of their former oppression of God's people. From the
+days when the Popes received their first temporal authority at the hands
+of the Carlovingian king, Pepin and Charlemagne, France[11] constituted
+the real backbone of the Papacy, the very center of her power and
+authority, as all history will show. In the fourteenth century the Papal
+seat was removed from Rome to Avignon, in France, where it remained for
+about seventy years. During this period all the Popes were French, and
+"all their policies were shaped and controlled by the French kings." To
+write a history of the Papacy during the Dark Ages is to outline the
+history of France, so closely are their affairs interwoven. Hence it is
+only natural that she should be symbolized as the "sea" in this part of
+the Apocalypse, with the other nations as tributaries. Ver. 4-6. That
+the French Revolution was in its effects a terrible blow to the thrones
+of despotism throughout Europe is shown by the following quotation from
+the Encyclopaedia Britannica: "We are coming to the verge of the French
+Revolution, which _surpasses all other revolutions the world has seen_
+in its completeness, the largeness of its theatre, the long preparation
+for it ... its _influence on the modern history of Europe_." Art.
+France.
+
+[Footnote 11: Pepin and Charlemagne were, properly speaking, simply
+German princes reigning in Gaul. The kingdom of France is usually dated
+from the accession of the first of the Capetian kings, late in the tenth
+century, 987. However, the Frankish nation, of whom the Carlovingian
+kings were leaders, laid the foundation of the French kingdom and gave a
+new name to Gaul--France.]
+
+This revolution commenced on the fifth of May, 1789, in the Convocation
+of the States General, for the redress of grievances and the extrication
+of the government and nation from the difficulties under which they were
+laboring. A conflict had been going on between despotism and popular
+rights, the throne and nobility contending for absolute power, and the
+people, for freedom. But when in this encounter the popular party
+triumphed, there was no fear of God before the eyes of those who seized
+the reins of government. The infidelity of Voltaire and his associates
+had removed the last restraint upon human passion, and the scenes of
+terror that followed are without a parallel in history. The king was
+condemned to death and executed. The barbarous execution of the queen,
+Marie Antoinette, followed in about six months, and this was immediately
+succeeded by the decree of the National Convention, of the most infamous
+character, that of the violation of the tombs of St. Dennis and the
+profanation of the sepulchres of the kings of France. I will quote from
+Sir A. Alison's noted History of Europe:
+
+"By a decree of the Convention, these venerable asylums of departed
+greatness were ordered to be destroyed.... A furious multitude
+precipitated itself out of Paris; the tombs of Henry IV., of Francis I.,
+and of Louis XII., were ransacked, and their bones scattered in the air.
+Even the glorious name of Turenne could not protect his grave from
+spoilation. His remains were almost undecayed, as when he received the
+fatal wound on the banks of the Lech. The bones of Charles V., the
+savior of his country, were dispersed. At his feet was found the coffin
+of the faithful Du Gueselin, and the French hands profaned the skeleton
+before which English invasion had rolled back. Most of these tombs were
+found to be strongly secured. Much time, and no small exertion of skill
+and labor, were required to burst their barriers. They would have
+resisted forever the decay of time or the violence of enemies; they
+yielded to the fury of domestic dissension. This was followed
+immediately by a general attack upon the monuments and remains of
+antiquity throughout all France. The sepulchres of the great of past
+ages, of the barons and generals of the feudal ages, of the
+paladins, and of the crusaders, were involved in one undistinguished
+ruin. It seemed as if the glories of antiquity were forgotten, or sought
+to be buried in oblivion. The tomb of Du Gueselin shared the same fate
+as that of Louis XIV. The skulls of monarchs and heroes were tossed
+about like foot balls by the profane multitude; like the grave-diggers
+in Hamlet, they made a jest of the lips before which the nations had
+trembled."
+
+Having begun by waging this profane warfare upon their own glorious
+dead, another scene of the fatal drama immediately succeeded. The same
+author continues: "Having massacred the great of the present and
+insulted the illustrious of former ages, nothing remained to the
+revolutionists but to direct their vengeance against heaven itself.
+Pache, Hebert, and Chaumette, the leaders of the municipality publicly
+expressed their determination 'to dethrone the God of heaven, as well as
+the monarchs of earth.' To accomplish this design, they prevailed on
+Gobet, the apostate constitutional bishop of Paris, to appear at the bar
+of the Assembly, accompanied by some of the clergy of his diocese, and
+there abjure the Christian faith. He declared 'that no other national
+religion was now required but that of Liberty, equality, and morality.'
+Many of the constitutional bishops and clergy in the Convention joined
+in the proposition. Crowds of drunken artisans and shameless prostitutes
+crowded to the bar, and trampled under their feet the sacred vases,
+consecrated for ages to the holiest purposes of religion. The churches
+were stripped of all their ornaments; their plate and valuable contents
+brought in heaps to the municipality and the Convention, from whence
+they were sent to the mint to be melted down. Trampling under foot the
+images of our Savior and the Virgin, they elevated, amid shouts of
+applause, the busts of Marat and Lepelletier, and danced around them,
+singing parodies on the Halleluiah, and dancing the Carmagnole.
+
+"Shortly after a still more indecent exhibition took place before the
+assembly.... Hebert and Chaumette, and their associates, appeared at the
+bar and declared 'that God did not exist, and that the worship of Reason
+was to be substituted in his stead.' A veiled female, arrayed in blue
+drapery, was brought into the Assembly; and Chaumette, taking her by the
+hand, 'Mortals,' said he, 'cease to tremble before the powerless
+thunders of a God whom your fears have created. Henceforth acknowledge
+no divinity but Reason. I offer you its noblest and purest image; if you
+must have idols, sacrifice only to this.' When, letting fall the veil,
+he exclaimed, 'Fall before the august Senate of Freedom, O Veil of
+Reason!' At the same time, the goddess appeared personified by a
+celebrated beauty, the wife of Momoro, a printer, known in more than one
+character to most of the Convention. The goddess after being embraced by
+the president, was mounted on a magnificent car, and conducted, amid an
+immense crowd, to the cathedral of Notre Dame, to take the place of the
+Deity. There she was elevated on a high altar, and received the
+adoration of all present, while the young women, her attendants, whose
+alluring looks already sufficiently indicated their profession, retired
+into the chapels around the choir, where every species of licentiousness
+and obscenity was indulged in without control, with hardly any veil from
+the public gaze. To such a length was this carried, that Robespierre
+afterward declared that Chaumette deserved death for the abominations he
+had permitted on that occasion. Thenceforward that ancient edifice was
+called the _Temple of Reason_."
+
+Such horrible events are sickening to relate; but as I started out to
+describe the condition of this "sea" when it became as the blood of a
+dead man, I must be faithful to the task. God was now dethroned; the
+services of religion abandoned; every tenth day set apart for the
+hellish orgies of atheism and Reason; Marat was deified; the instrument
+of death sanctified by the name "the holy Guillotine"; on the public
+cemeteries was inscribed, "Death is an Eternal Sleep"; marriage was a
+civil contract, binding only during the pleasure of the contracting
+parties. Mademoiselle Arnout, a celebrated comedian, expressed the
+public feeling when she said, "_Marriage the sacrament of adultery_."
+What an awful harvest would be expected of such seed! Alison continues:
+
+"A Revolutionary Tribunal was formed at Nantes, under the direction of
+Carrier, and it soon outstripped even the rapid march of Danton and
+Robespierre. Their principle was that it was necessary to destroy _en
+masse_, all the prisoners. At their command was formed a corps, called
+the Legion of Marat, composed of the most determined and bloodthirsty of
+the revolutionists, the members of which were entitled, on their own
+authority, to incarcerate any person whom they chose. The number of
+their prisoners was soon between three and four thousand, and they
+divided among themselves all their property. Whenever a further supply
+of captives was wanted, the alarm was spread of a counter-revolution,
+the _generale_ beat, the cannon planted; and this was followed
+immediately by innumerable arrests. Nor were they long in disposing of
+their captives. The miserable wretches were either slain with poinards
+in prison, or carried out in a vessel and drowned by wholesale in the
+Loire. On one occasion a hundred 'fanatical priests,' as they were
+termed, were taken out together, striped of their clothes, and
+precipitated into the waters.... Women big with child, infants eight,
+nine, and ten years of age, were thrown together into the stream, on the
+sides of which men, armed with sabres, were placed to cut off their
+heads if the waves should throw them undrowned on the shore.
+
+"On one occasion, by orders of Carrier, twenty-three of the
+revolutionists, on another twenty-four, were guillotined without any
+trial. The executioner remonstrated, but in vain. Among them were many
+children of seven or eight years of age, and seven women; the
+executioner died two or three days after, with horror at what he himself
+had done. So great was the multitude of captives who were brought in on
+all sides, that the executioners, as well as the company of Marat,
+declared themselves exhausted with fatigue; and a new method of
+disposing of them was adopted, borrowed from Nero, but improved on the
+plan of that tyrant. A hundred or a hundred and fifty victims, for the
+most part women and children, were crowded together in a boat, with a
+concealed trap-door in the bottom, which was conducted into the middle
+of the Loire; at a signal given, the crew leaped into another boast, the
+bolts were withdrawn, and the shrieking victims precipitated into the
+waters, amid the laughter of the company of Marat, who stood on the
+banks to cut down any who approached the shore. This was what Carrier
+called his _Republican Baptisms_. The _Republican Marriages_ were, if
+possible, a still greater refinement of cruelty. Two persons of
+different sexes, bereft of every species of dress, were bound together,
+and after being left in torture in that situation for half an hour,
+thrown into the river. Such was the quantity of corpses accumulated in
+the Loire, that the water of that river was affected, so as to render a
+public ordinance necessary, forbidding the use of it to the inhabitants;
+and the mariners, when they heaved their anchors, frequently brought up
+boats charged with corpses. Birds of prey flocked to the shores and fed
+on human flesh; while the very fish became so poisonous, as to induce an
+order of the municipality of Nantes, prohibiting them to be taken by the
+fishermen.
+
+"The scenes in the prisons which preceded these horrible executions
+exceeded all that romance had figured of the terrible. Many women died
+of terror the moment a man entered their cells, conceiving that they
+were about to be led out to the noyades; the floors were covered with
+the bodies of their infants, numbers of whom were yet quivering in the
+agonies of death. On one occasion, the inspector entered the prison to
+seek for a child, where, the evening before, he had left above three
+hundred infants; they were all gone in the morning, having been drowned
+the preceding night. Fifteen thousand persons perished either under the
+hands of the executioner, or of disease in prison, in one month: the
+total victims of the Reign of Terror at that place exceeded thirty
+thousand."
+
+After narrating scenes of terror in Paris, Alison says again: "Such
+accumulated horrors annihilated all the charities and intercourse of
+life. Before daybreak the shops of the provision merchants were besieged
+by crowds of women and children, clamoring for the food which the law of
+the _maximum_ in general prevented them from obtaining. The farmers
+trembled to bring their fruits to the market, the shop-keepers to expose
+them to sale. The richest quarters of the town were deserted; no
+equipages of crowds of passengers were to be seen on the streets; the
+sinister words, _Propriete Nationale_, imprinted in large characters on
+the walls, everywhere showed how far the work of confiscation had
+proceeded. Passengers hesitated to address their most intimate friends
+on meeting; the extent of calamity had rendered men suspicious even of
+those they loved most. Every one assumed the coarsest dress, and the
+most squalid appearance; an elegant exterior would have been the certain
+forerunner of destruction. At one hour only were any symptoms of
+animation seen: it was when the victims were conveyed to execution; the
+humane fled with horror from the sight, the infuriated rushed in crowds
+to satiate their eyes with the sight of human agony.
+
+"Night came, but with it no diminution of the anxiety of the people.
+Every family early assembled its members; with trembling looks they
+gazed around the room, fearful that the very walls might harbor
+traitors. The sound of a foot, the stroke of a hammer, a voice in the
+streets, froze all hearts with horror. If a knock was heard at the door,
+every one, in agonized suspense, expected his fate. Unable to endure
+such protracted misery, numbers committed suicide. 'Had the reign of
+Robespierre,' said Freron, 'continued longer, multitudes would have
+thrown themselves under the guillotine; the first of social affections,
+the love of life, was already extinguished in almost every heart.'"
+
+With one more quotation from this historian I will dismiss this horrible
+theme: "The combination of wicked men who thereafter governed France, is
+without parallel in the history of the world. Their power, based on the
+organized weight of the multitude, and the ardent co-operation of the
+municipalities, everywhere installed by them in the position of power,
+was irresistible. All bowed the neck before this gigantic assemblage of
+wickedness. The revolutionary excesses daily increased, in consequence
+of the union which the constant dread of retribution produced among
+their perpetrators. There was no medium between taking part in these
+atrocities, and falling a victim to them. Virtue seemed powerless;
+energy appeared only in the extremity of resignation; religion in the
+heroism of which death was endured. There was not a hope left for
+France, had it not been for the dissentions which, as the natural result
+of their wickedness, sprung up among the authors of the public
+calamities.
+
+"It is impossible not to be struck, in looking back on the fate of these
+different parties, with the singular and providential manner in which
+their crimes brought about their own punishment. No foreign
+interposition was necessary, no avenging angel was required to vindicate
+the justice of divine administration. They fell the victims of their own
+atrocity, of the passions which they themselves had let loose, of the
+injustice of which they had given the first example to others The
+Constitutionalists overthrew the ancient monarchy, and formed a limited
+government; but their imprudence in raising popular ambition paved the
+way for the tenth of August, and speedily brought themselves to the
+scaffold; the Girondists established their favored dream of a republic,
+and were the first victims of the fury which it excited; the Dantonists
+roused the populace against the Gironde, and soon fell under the axe
+which they had prepared for their rivals; the anarchists defied the
+power of 'heaven itself,' but scarce were their blasphemies uttered,
+when they were swept off by the partners of their bloody triumphs. One
+only power remained, alone, terrible, irresistible. This was the power
+of Death, wielded by a faction steeled against every feeling of
+humanity, dead to every principle of justice. In their iron hands, order
+resumed its sway from the influence of terror; obedience became
+universal, from the extinction of hope. Silent and unresisted, they led
+their victims to the scaffold, dreaded alike by the soldiers who
+crouched, the people who trembled, and the victims who suffered. The
+history of the world _has no parallel_ to that long night of suffering,
+because _it has none to the guilt which preceded it_; tyranny never
+assumed so hideous a form, because licentiousness never required so
+severe a punishment."
+
+Prom this awful description, which might be carried to almost any
+extent, the reader will understand the force of the prophecy which
+declared that the "sea became as the blood of a dead man, and every
+living soul died in the sea."
+
+ 4. And the third angel poured out his vial upon the rivers and
+ fountains of waters; and they became blood.
+
+ 5. And I heard the angel of the waters say, Thou art righteous,
+ O Lord, which art, and wast, and shalt be, because thou hast
+ judged thus.
+
+ 6. For they have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and thou
+ hast given them blood to drink; for they are worthy.
+
+ 7. And I heard another out of the altar say, Even so, Lord God
+ Almighty, true and righteous are thy judgments.
+
+Fountains and rivers are tributaries to the sea, and thus, they
+symbolize the inferior communities and nations belonging to the
+Apocalyptic earth. France was the great central power and the sea of
+revolution upon which the second vial descended. The surrounding nations
+were the rivers and fountains upon which the third was poured. It is not
+said of them that they became as the blood of a dead man, nor that every
+living thing in them died, but only that "they became blood." This
+symbol denotes the insurrections and desolating wars in which the
+nations of Europe were involved for a number of years, growing out of
+the French Revolution. I shall not here take time nor space to enter
+into the historical details relating to this statement; the facts are
+well known. "The blood-thirsty Jacobinism of France waged war not only
+upon its own monarchy, but sought to overturn all the thrones and
+fabrics of despotism in Europe. The same system of infidelity and
+atheism had been spread through the kingdoms there, though not to so
+great an extent as in France, and prepared the elements for revolution
+in them likewise." The French republic encouraged these agitations and
+by a unanimous decree of the Assembly, in 1792, set itself in open
+hostility with all the established governments of Europe. It was in
+these words: "The National Convention declares in the name of the French
+nation, that it will grant fraternity and assistance to all people who
+wish to recover their liberty; and it charges the executive power to
+send the necessary orders to the generals, to give succor to such
+people, and to defend those citizens who have suffered, or may suffer in
+the cause of liberty." "The Revolution, having accomplished its work in
+France, having there destroyed royal despotism, ... now set itself about
+fulfilling its early promise of giving liberty to all peoples. In a
+word, the revolutionists became propagandists. France now exhibits what
+her historians call her social, her communicative genius." Napoleon was
+right when he said that a revolution in France was sure to be followed
+by a revolution throughout Europe. "France conceived the idea that she
+had a Divine mission, as the great apostle of liberty, to propagate
+republicanism through all the kingdoms of Europe. In her madness of
+intoxication she undertook the work, threw down the gauntlet, and the
+fierce tocsin of war sounded from nation to nation, until the continent
+was converted into one vast battle-field."
+
+The "angel of the waters" signifies the angel that had charge of the
+vial of wrath poured out upon the rivers and fountains of waters. In
+full view of the awful plagues sent upon the inhabitants of earth, one
+grand thought seemed to occupy his mind--the righteousness of these
+judgments. It is not such a thought as humanity would have in mind when
+reading the history of these fearful convulsions of society, one scene
+of terror only preparing the way for another more horrible, until they
+would feel like closing the book and asking, "When will this awful night
+of horror be over? When will these avenging judgments cease?" These,
+however, were not the thoughts of this angel clothed in spotless
+garments; for, draining his vial to the dregs and forcing the nations to
+drink it, he said: "Thou art righteous, O Lord, which art, and wast, and
+shalt be, because thou hast judged thus. For they have shed the blood of
+saints and prophets, and thou hast given them _blood to drink_; for they
+are worthy." Truly, in this the Word of God is fulfilled, which says,
+"My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways." Isa.
+55:8. That class of people who represent God as a kind, loving Father
+only, one who will not take vengeance upon the objects of his own
+creation--let them visit in the pages of history these nations of
+Europe, scathed and blasted with the hot thunderbolts of divine wrath,
+until their minds sicken with horror at the sight of human agony and
+blood. In full view of these horrifying scenes let them hear the angel
+of the waters saying, "Thou art righteous, O Lord ... because thou hast
+judged thus; for they have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and
+thou hast given them blood to drink, for they are worthy"; while another
+voice from heaven, even from the altar, replies, "Even so, Lord God
+Almighty, _true and righteous_ are thy judgments"--and their theology
+must here break down.
+
+The thoughts just expressed confirm with certainty our interpretation of
+the "sea" and "rivers and fountains of waters" as signifying those
+nations which had been the persecutors of the saints, and show, also,
+the character of the divine judgments as being the shedding of their
+blood. They had shed the blood of saints and prophets, and now the same
+cup of wrath was placed to their lips, and they were forced to drink it
+to the dregs. God remembered the sighs and groans of his faithful
+followers; the cry of the martyrs for the avenging of their blood on
+"them that dwell on the earth" reached his ear; and now the time of
+retribution began.
+
+ 8. And the fourth angel poured out his vial upon the sun; and
+ power was given unto him to scorch men with fire.
+
+ 9. And men were scorched with great heat, and blasphemed the
+ name of God, which hath power over these plagues: and they
+ repented not to give him glory.
+
+The sun is the great central luminary of the earth, under whose genial
+light and warmth everything rejoices and develops in forms of beauty.
+When, however, a scorching power is given to his rays, the earth becomes
+as a furnace in which every green thing is burnt up. What the sun is to
+this world, such are the ruling powers to a kingdom; and power being
+given them to scorch as with fire denotes that the government would be
+administered, not for the good of the people, but for the purpose of
+oppression. A scorching sun, therefore, is a proper symbol of tyrant
+rulers.
+
+Still keeping in view the object of God in sending these first
+plagues--the punishment of the nations embraced within the territory of
+the ten former kingdoms of Europe--we are directed with certainty to the
+next great scourge that followed as a result of those already
+developed--the almost universal military empire of Napoleon. The success
+of three of the four greatest military leaders the world has ever
+seen--Alexander, Caesar, and Charlemagne--has been so clearly predicted
+by inspiration that no believer in the truth of Revelation attempts to
+deny it; therefore it is not surprising that the fourth--Napoleon--
+should also be assigned a place in Apocalyptic vision: not so much
+because of his all-powerful military genius merely, but because of his
+mighty influence and effects upon the very nations that were especially
+made the subject of prophecy, as they stand connected with the history
+of God's people for centuries. At the close of the Revolution the French
+nation had not virtue nor religion necessary to remedy the evils under
+which they had long been suffering from the oppression of their
+monarchs; for when they undertook the work and demolished the throne,
+they let loose all the wildest elements of wrath to rage without
+restraint. The nation rejected God, and God rejected the nation. He gave
+them up to their own madness, to the fury of the most atrocious
+wickedness that was ever developed under heaven. "From the wild excesses
+and intolerable calamities of blood-red republicanism, the people were
+rejoiced at length to find a refuge in a gigantic military despotism,
+which became the terror and scourge of Europe." But the hand of God was
+in this thing, also. When the sun scorches the earth with burning heat,
+it is God that gives it its power. So Napoleon with his iron will and
+towering genius was only an instrument in God's hand for scourging the
+guilty nations. In the ordinary sense of the term Napoleon was not a
+tyrant to his own nation. Still, his government was a despotism to
+France; while to the Apocalyptic earth, or the ten kingdoms, he was a
+scorching sun, for his empire extended over the whole. It finally became
+a saying that "if Napoleon's cocked hat and gray coat should be raised
+on the cliffs of Boulogne, all Europe would run to arms." This agrees
+with the statement of the historian Judson, concerning the monarchs of
+Europe, that "the mere name of Napoleon was a dread to them." None of
+them could stand before his terrible onset. "Europe was shaken from end
+to end by such armies as the world had not seen since the days of
+Xerxes. Napoleon, whose hands were upheld by a score of distinguished
+marshals, performed the miracles of genius. His brilliant achievements
+still dazzle, while they amaze, the world." The crowns and scepters of
+Europe he held as play-things in his hand, to dispose of at pleasure.
+Says Wickes: "Never in the history of Christendom were ancient dynasties
+overthrown, and new ones created, kings made and unmade, within so short
+a period, as during the unparallelled career of this great conqueror. He
+had the crowns and kingdoms of all Europe in his gift, to settle as he
+pleased, or bestow as presents upon his relatives and friends. To his
+brother Jerome he gave the crown of Westphalia; to his brother Louis,
+the crown of Holland; to his brother Joseph, the kingdom of Spain; to
+his brother-in-law and general Murat, the kingdom of Naples; and others
+he conferred upon his favorite marshals."
+
+When he invaded Russia, a territory outside of the Apocalyptic earth, he
+exceeded his mission, and there met with the most terrible overthrow.
+Although he entered that kingdom with the most magnificent army that he
+had ever gathered together, yet for suffering and disaster that famous
+retreat from burning Moscow stands without a parallel in history. It was
+not the Russian armies that prevailed against him; it was God that
+fought against him with the blasts of his north wind. These speedily
+silenced those tremendous parks of artillery that had thundered upon the
+fields of Jena, Friedland, Wagram, Marengo and Austerlitz, and scattered
+those invincible battalions that had marched triumphant over Europe.
+Ney, at the head of the National Guards, ever before victorious, was
+compelled to beat a hasty retreat, glad to escape with the smallest
+remnant of his host. Napoleon failed here because God had given him no
+mission to perform in that territory.
+
+Concerning his ambition, the Encyclopaedia Britannica says: "With a frame
+of iron, Napoleon could endure any hardships; and in war, in artillery
+especially and engineering, he stands unrivalled in the world's
+history.... He could not rest, and knew not when he had achieved
+success.... He succeeded in alienating the peoples of Europe, in whose
+behalf he pretended to be acting. And when they learned by bitter
+experience that he had absolutely no love for liberty, and encouraged
+equality only so long as it was an equality of subjects under his rule,
+they soon began to war against what was in fact a world-destroying
+military despotism." He was inspired with the most unbounded ambition,
+which was nothing short of despotism over all Europe, if not the world.
+Universal empire was his grand object, or, as it has been expressed by
+historians, a desire to concentrate "the world in Europe--Europe in
+France--France in Paris--Paris in _himself_." Says Wickes: "The empire
+which he actually reared in Europe was a vast, oppressive, centralized
+despotism.... To build it up, he desolated France through his terrible
+conscriptions, requiring the whole strength and flower of the nation to
+supply his armies. It is stated that after the wars of Napoleon there
+were three times the number of women in France that there were of men.
+The fathers, the husbands, the sons, the brothers, had fallen upon the
+battle-field, and thus desolated almost every household in the kingdom.
+Similar desolation also he carried by his wars into the other kingdoms."
+
+The dread of Napoleon settled down upon all the nations of Europe. They
+could not cope with his mighty genius, and therefore his presence was a
+terror to them. When the allied powers secured his first abdication, in
+1814, and sent him to the island of Elba, the desolating results of his
+long career were shown in the work that the Congress of Vienna was
+called upon to perform when it assembled in the fall of 1814. While the
+representatives of the powers were laboring to repair the damage that
+had been wrought and to adjust the territorial limitations of the
+various nations that had been altered or entirely demolished, the
+assemblage was suddenly surprised the following spring by the news that
+Napoleon had escaped from Elba and was enroute to Paris. The terror and
+consternation in Europe then experienced is shown by the following
+quotation from Sir James Mackintosh, a man of high reputation as a
+jurist, as a historian, and as a far-sighted and candid statesman:
+
+"Was it in the power of language to describe the evil! Wars which had
+raged for more than twenty years throughout Europe, which had spread
+blood and desolation from Cadiz to Moscow, and from Naples to
+Copenhagen; which had wasted the means of human enjoyment, and destroyed
+the instruments of social improvement; which threatened to diffuse among
+the European nations the dissolute and ferocious habits of a predatory
+soldiery ... had been brought to a close.... Europe seemed to breathe
+after her sufferings. In the midst of this fair prospect and of these
+consolatory hopes, Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from Elba; three small
+vessels reached the coast of Provence; their hopes are instantly
+dispelled; the work of our toil and fortitude is undone: the blood of
+Europe is spilled in vain."
+
+The bitterest ingredients in the cup of these nations was the
+humiliating overthrow of their own government and their subjection to
+the hated _republican_ despotism of France. It was a scorching sun that
+they could not endure. Still, they repented not to give God glory; they
+continued as before. After Napoleon had accomplished the purpose for
+which he was intended, God permitted this stupendous genius to be
+subdued; but it required the combined powers of Europe to secure his
+downfall.
+
+Creasy, in his Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World, says concerning
+the battle of Waterloo, "The great battle which ended the twenty-three
+years' war of the first French revolution, and which quelled the man
+whose genius and ambition had so long _disturbed and desolated the
+world_, deserves to be regarded by us ... with peculiar gratitude for
+the repose which it secured for us and for the greater part of the human
+race."
+
+ 10. And the fifth angel poured out his vial upon the seat of the
+ beast; and his kingdom was full of darkness; and they gnawed
+ their tongues for pain,
+
+ 11. And blasphemed the God of heaven because of their pains and
+ their sores, and repented not of their deeds.
+
+Under this vial the symbols differ somewhat. The "beast" is evidently
+the one of whom the image was made, referred to in verse 2--the Papacy.
+The seat that the Papacy occupied from the time the dragon resigned in
+favor of the beast (chap. 13:2) was his position of temporal power and
+authority. In the following chapter the Papacy is described as _seated_
+upon a ten-horned beast, the ten horns of which symbolized the kingdoms
+of Europe. In this position it was able to exercise a guiding influence
+over the European nations. We have already seen what great power the
+Popes exercised in this direction during the Dark Ages. But the "beast"
+of chapter 17 himself, as distinguished from his horns, symbolizes the
+Holy Roman Empire, which was a revival of the old empire of the Caesars.
+This revived "world-empire" was closely allied to the Papacy. When
+Charlemagne, the Carlovingian king, restored the empire of the West, he
+was crowned "Emperor of the Romans" by Pope Leo III., A.D. 800. "The
+Popes made the descendants of Charles Martel kings and emperors; the
+grateful Frankish princes defended the Popes against all their enemies,
+imperial and barbarian, and dowering them with cities and provinces,
+laid the basis of their temporal sovereignty, which continued for more
+than a thousand years." After the decline of the Carlovingian power the
+imperial authority was again revived by Otto the Great (962), who was
+crowned Emperor of the Romans by the Pope. Henceforth the empire of the
+West was termed the _Holy Roman Empire_. "From this time on it was the
+rule that the German king who was crowned at Aachen had a right to be
+crowned ... emperor at Rome." So the general rule was that the Popes
+upheld the emperors, and the emperors sustained the Popes in their
+position as the spiritual heads of the church and as temporal rulers
+over the Papal states, which were granted them originally by the
+donations of Pepin and Charlemagne.
+
+In chapter 13 the civil powers of Europe and the ecclesiastical power of
+Rome are not shown by a double symbol--a woman and a beast--as in
+chapter 17, but are there represented by a combination of symbols drawn
+from the departments of human life and animal life, which shows that a
+politico-religious system is intended, as heretofore explained; hence
+the term _beast_, as there used, signifies either the Papacy or the
+civil power. Thus the term is used in the present chapter under
+consideration, and has reference here to the beast as an ecclesiastical
+power--the Papacy--and his "seat" refers to his temporal authority.
+
+This vial, then, being poured out upon his seat, with the result that
+his kingdom was filled with darkness--a symbol drawn from nature--points
+to the downfall of the Pope as a temporal ruler. Thus he would be
+deprived of his "seat."
+
+We have already seen that each plague prepares the way for a succeeding
+one. Under the reign of Napoleon the Holy Roman Empire was dissolved
+(1806). This was the beginning of the end of the Pope's temporal
+authority; for the two had in a great measure been for ages
+interdependent upon each other. Pius VII. was made a prisoner and the
+temporal sovereignty of the Roman See declared to be at an end; while
+the Pope himself was forced to disown all claim to rank as a temporal
+ruler. Of course, this was but a temporary overthrow; for when the
+period of Reaction came, the Pope recovered also temporal authority. But
+the vast territories of Avignon, Venaissin, Bologna, Ferrara, and the
+Romagna--representing fully _a third_ of all the Papal dominions--which
+had been forcibly ceded to France under Napoleon, was never restored to
+the Roman See. From that time the sun of the Pope's temporal kingdom
+rapidly approached the horizon; while the inhabitants of his dominions
+continued to blaspheme God through the atheistical Jacobinism that
+infested to so great an extent the whole mass of society--symbolized by
+their "sores"--and the firm supporters of Popery were filled with
+excessive chagrin and mortification of mind--symbolized by their
+"pains"--because the power of their leader, who professed temporal
+sovereignty over the whole earth, was being suddenly destroyed and his
+kingdom left in darkness. Concerning this matter the People's
+Cyclopaedia, after speaking of the blow the Pope's spiritual supremacy
+received at the Reformation, says: "But in her relations to the State
+the Roman church has since passed through _a long and critical
+struggle_. The new theories _to which the French Revolution gave
+currency_ have still further modified these relations." In the second
+revolution of 1848 the Pope's temporal authority was about to be
+entirely destroyed by the attempted establishment of the republic of
+Italy; but at this juncture France, who, notwithstanding her plagues,
+had not repented of her former deeds, not willing to desert entirely the
+Papal cause after upholding it faithfully for centuries, interfered, and
+the Pope was sustained in his position by a French garrison until 1870
+(except a short time in 1867), at which time the success of King Victor
+Emmanuel and his capture of the Eternal City established the free
+government of United Italy. The temporal sun of the Pope set forever;
+his kingdom was left in darkness.
+
+ 12. And the sixth angel poured out his vial upon the great river
+ Euphrates; and the water thereof was dried up, that the way of
+ the kings of the east might be prepared.
+
+ 13. And I saw three unclean spirits like frogs come out of the
+ mouth of the dragon, and out of the mouth of the beast, and out
+ of the mouth of the false prophet.
+
+ 14. For they are the spirits of devils, working miracles, which
+ go forth unto the kings of the earth and of the whole world, to
+ gather them to the battle of that great day of God Almighty.
+
+ 15. Behold, I come as a thief. Blessed is he that watcheth, and
+ keepeth his garments, lest he walk naked, and they see his
+ shame.
+
+ 16. And he gathered them together into a place called in the
+ Hebrew tongue Armageddon.
+
+The symbols under this vial are so different that at first they scarcely
+look like anything constituting a plague. By recalling a few
+circumstances of history we shall understand why the river Euphrates was
+selected as a symbol, and also, its true signification in this
+connection. This river was connected with ancient Babylon, and while
+running in its own channel was the protection of the city and an
+obstacle to its capture. By turning the water of this river from its
+course, King Cyrus (according to the account given by Herodotus)
+succeeded in overthrowing the city, with the result that God's people
+who were at that time in captivity there received permission to return
+to their own land and to rebuild the house of God in Jerusalem. Ezra
+1:1-3. Under the sixth trumpet this symbol was applied to the four
+angels as a symbol of the restraint placed upon their operations, they
+being bound in that river. As there are no agents in this vision who are
+represented as bound, we must apply it to the city itself, the name of
+which is given in verse 19--Babylon--being a symbol of one of its
+defenses. According to verse 19 this mystical Babylon is composed of
+three parts, being made up of the dragon (in his modern form), the
+beast, and the false prophet mentioned in verse 13. And its location is
+not confined to the territory of the ten kingdoms; for its field of
+operations is not only that of the "earth"--the Apocalyptic earth--but
+"_of the whole world_." Ver. 14. In one division of this great city,
+that of the false prophet, God's people were long held in captivity; but
+its spiritual overthrow was to be accomplished by the drying up of the
+Euphrates of its defenses, that the way of the kings of the East might
+be prepared.[12]
+
+[Footnote 12: Applying the Euphrates (an object from nature) as a symbol
+of ecclesiastical affairs in this manner appears to be in violation of
+the laws of symbolic language laid down; but we should bear in mind the
+fact that events of whatever nature connected with the history of God's
+chosen people in the old dispensation are of themselves proper symbols
+of similar events in the New Testament dispensation. Thus the temple,
+altar, candle-sticks, incense, holy city, etc., of the former
+dispensation, although of themselves objects from nature, are
+nevertheless clearly used to represent affairs of the church, because of
+their former significance as connected with the people of God. The fact
+that the great city of this chapter is spiritual Babylon (see verse 19)
+is positive proof that the river Euphrates is here applied in the proper
+manner.]
+
+To the Hebrews the term _east_ had a much more extensive signification
+than with us, to whom its only distinction is that it is the point of
+the sun's rising. But beyond this, it was to the Jews the cardinal point
+of the compass to which they naturally looked first. Their temple was
+built toward the east, its principal entrance being in that direction.
+The most powerful and enlightened kingdoms of the world lay to the east
+of Judea, and they included them all under the general term, sons or
+children of the East (Orientals) and kings of the East, comprehending
+not only Arabia and the lands of Moab and Ammon, but also Armenia,
+Assyria, Mesopotamia, Babylonia and Chaldea. Travelers from these
+countries would all enter Judea from the east, and they were considered
+Orientals. These nations were also distinguished for their proficiency
+in science and learning. The Magi, or wise men of the East, came to
+worship the infant Jesus at Jerusalem. They were eminent in the science
+of astrology, which was considered the greatest science of that day. The
+East, therefore, was looked to for wise men; and it is a noticeable fact
+that the pathway of science, of literature, and of empire has ever been
+from that direction, so as to have passed into a proverb, "westward the
+star of empire holds its way." "The kings of the East," then, employed
+as a symbol of this sixth vial, is not intended to signify any persons
+literally from that quarter of the earth, but represents the bringing in
+of knowledge and understanding. Thank God that we live in the time when
+the defenses of spiritual Babylon have been broken through and when
+light and knowledge on the Word of God has reached the hearts of many
+redeemed souls held in bondage there! And like the Israelites of old,
+when Cyrus, entered the ancient Babylon through the dry river-bed of the
+Euphrates, they have come out with rejoicing and made their way to Zion
+again. Halleluiah! That the spiritual downfall of Babylon is a real
+plague to sectarians there can be no doubt, and it is plainly declared
+to be such in chap. 18:8, where the same event is described.
+
+At the very time when the defenses of Babylon are thrown down, the three
+unclean spirits like frogs come out of the mouth of the dragon
+(Paganism), and out of the mouth of the beast (Romanism), and out of the
+mouth of the false prophet (Protestantism), to gather together all the
+wicked powers throughout "the whole world" for that last great day of
+God Almighty.[13] There is no analagous object to which a _spirit_ can
+be made a symbol; therefore we must regard them as being literally
+spirits of devils, here appearing under their own appropriate title.
+Their mission is to form a confederation of all the gigantic powers of
+wickedness, slimy and loathsome as the animal to which they are likened,
+and to array themselves against the cause of Christ.
+
+[Footnote 13: I do not suppose that these three unclean spirits should
+be limited in their operations to Paganism, Romanism, and Protestantism;
+for that leaves out Mohammedanism, which is neither Pagan, Roman, nor
+Protestant, yet is certainly "false prophecy"; and the three spirits
+were to gather the "whole world."]
+
+Armageddon, where the spirits gathered all the enemies of truth and
+righteousness together, means the mountain of Megiddo, the memorable
+field of the overthrow of Sisera's mighty host by Barak. It was also the
+place of great defeat to the Israelites in the time of Josiah and the
+scene of his death. The name, therefore, stands as a symbol for a field
+of slaughter or defeat and denotes that when the confederation of
+wickedness is complete, the united host of God's enemies will be utterly
+defeated, as by the overthrow of Megiddo. This great conflict with
+powers of wickedness and spirits infernal will be further explained in
+chapter XX.
+
+Simultaneous with the notable events of this vial, the announcement is
+made of the near-coming of Christ to the world--"Behold I come as a
+thief. Blessed is he that watcheth, and keepeth his garments, lest he
+walk naked, and they see his shame." The children of God that have been
+gathered out of old Babylon rejoice in the glad announcement and say,
+"Even so come, Lord Jesus."
+
+ 17. And the seventh angel poured out his vial into the air; and
+ there came a great voice out of the temple of heaven, from the
+ throne, saying, It is done.
+
+ 18. And there were voices, and thunders, and lightnings; and
+ there was a great earthquake, such as was not since men were
+ upon the earth, so mighty an earthquake, and so great.
+
+ 19. And the great city was divided into three parts, and the
+ cities of the nations fell: and great Babylon came in
+ remembrance before God, to give unto her the cup of the wine of
+ the fierceness of his wrath.
+
+ 20. And every island fled away, and the mountains were not
+ found.
+
+ 21. And there fell upon men a great hail out of heaven, every
+ stone about the weight of a talent: and men blasphemed God
+ because of the plague of the hail; for the plague thereof was
+ exceeding great.
+
+The application of this vial to the judgments of the last great day is
+so plain that but little comment is here necessary. It was poured "into
+the air," a region of vast extent, not confined to a given locality, but
+embracing the whole earth. Hence this plague is universal. When the
+seventh angel emptied his vial, "There came a great voice out of the
+temple of heaven, from the throne, saying, It is done." All is now
+fulfilled. The work of wrath is finished. The description of the plague
+follows, but it follows only _as a description_. As actually
+accomplished, it preceded that great voice, which was uttered in view of
+the thing already brought to pass.
+
+The dissolution of the earth itself upon which we live is not here
+described, although according to the teaching of other scriptures it
+occurs at this time; but the symbols, being drawn from the department of
+the operations both of humanity and of nature, show the complete and
+final overthrow of all the great powers civil and ecclesiastical. The
+dominancy of these great powers has been the chief burden of Apocalyptic
+vision, and here their utter destruction at last is set forth under
+various symbols. The weight of the Jewish talent is said to have been
+one hundred and fourteen pounds. Such a mass of ice descending from
+heaven would beat down everything in its resistless, desolating fury.
+There is no intimation, however, of men being killed under this or the
+accompanying symbols; therefore as individuals they survive, while the
+storm of wrath falls upon the civil and ecclesiastical institutions of
+society, resulting in their utter annihilation. This is the "great day
+of his wrath" described under the sixth seal, to the symbols of which
+this description bears a striking resemblance, as any one can see at a
+glance. Well may the oppressors of earth say to the mountains and hills,
+"Fall on us, and hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the
+throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb: for the great day of his wrath
+is come; and who shall be able to stand?" Chap. 6:16, 17.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+ And there came one of the seven angels which had the seven
+ vials, and talked with me, saying unto me, Come hither; I will
+ show unto thee the judgment of the great whore that sitteth upon
+ many waters:
+
+ 2. With whom the kings of the earth have committed fornication,
+ and the inhabitants of the earth have been made drunk with the
+ wine of her fornication.
+
+ 3. So he carried me away in the spirit into the wilderness: and
+ I saw a woman sit upon a scarlet colored beast, full of names of
+ blasphemy, having seven heads and ten horns.
+
+ 4. And the woman was arrayed in purple and scarlet color, and
+ decked with gold and precious stones and pearls, having a golden
+ cup in her hand full of abominations and filthiness of her
+ fornication:
+
+ 5. And upon her forehead was a name written, MYSTERY, BABYLON
+ THE GREAT, THE MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH.
+
+ 6. And I saw the woman drunken with the blood of the saints, and
+ with the blood of the martyrs of Jesus: and when I saw her, I
+ wondered with great admiration.
+
+Here again the narrative returns to take up another series of the
+history. A number of times we have been taken over the same ground. It
+is this feature of the Apocalypse more than any other that has misled
+and perplexed commentators. Attempting to explain it as one continuous
+narrative from beginning to end, they have been compelled to consider
+numerous passages as "digressions," "parentheses," or "episodes," etc.
+As already observed, however, the prophecy is not arranged after the
+ordinary plan of histories, narrating all the contemporaneous events in
+a given period, whether civil, religious, literary, scientific, or
+biographical, thus finishing up the history of that period; but it
+consists of a number of distinct themes running over the same ground.
+
+In this chapter a more particular description of the church of Rome,
+"that great city which reigneth over the kings of the earth" (verse 18),
+is given under the symbol of a drunken harlot. With this vile prostitute
+"the kings of the earth have committed fornication"--they have
+encouraged her in her corruption and idolatries--"and the inhabitants of
+the earth have been made drunk with the wine of her fornication." This
+latter symbol is doubtless taken from the cup of drugged wine with which
+lewd women were accustomed to inflame their lovers. So had this apostate
+church made "the inhabitants of the earth"--of the ten kingdoms--drunken
+with her wine-cup and thus rendered them willing partakers in her
+abominable idolatries. She is described in two positions--first, as
+"sitting upon many waters," which the angel informs us "are peoples, and
+multitudes, and nations, and tongues" (verse 15); and second, "upon a
+scarlet-colored beast, full of names of blasphemy, having seven heads
+and ten horns." The first position denotes her wide supremacy in the
+world over distant peoples and nations; the second, the close
+relationship that she sustained to the civil power. That beast carried
+her in royal state. The civil powers of Europe have usually lent
+themselves as a caparisoned hack for this great whore to ride upon and
+have considered themselves highly honored thereby. This beast was full
+of the names of blasphemy, which were the same as the blasphemous
+assumptions of the Papacy, as explained in chapter XIII, showing that he
+agreed perfectly with this apostate church in her impious claims and
+supported her in them, making himself equally guilty and deserving of
+the same name. What is intended exactly by his scarlet color I do not
+know. The same power under its Pagan form was represented as a red
+dragon.
+
+The appearance of this woman was that of the most splendid character,
+nor are we to suppose the contrary because she was such an infamous
+prostitute. She may have been, and according to the description was, all
+that, but still her appearance was such as to bewitch her admirers and
+votaries. Robes of purple and scarlet, with the most costly profusion of
+gold and diamonds, were superb adorning, even regal splendor. All that
+skill and wealth could do in magnificence of attire was bestowed upon
+her to set forth her charms. The "golden cup in her hand" was as to
+richness in harmony with her dress, while as to contents it set forth
+her character, for it was "full of abominations and filthiness of her
+fornication." This cup was an appropriate symbol of her atrocious
+wickedness and idolatries.
+
+This woman had also a name written on her forehead. It was not, indeed,
+placed there by herself nor by her admirers; but He who drew this
+symbolic picture placed it there that all might know her true character.
+"MYSTERY, BABYLON THE GREAT, THE MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND ABOMINATIONS OF
+THE EARTH." Although this apostate church was only in embryo in the
+apostles' day, yet the apostle who gave us a careful delineation of its
+terrible characteristics declared that it was then developing and
+denominated it a _mystery_. "The mystery of iniquity doth already work."
+2 Thes. 2:7. The same apostle regarded as an unquestionable fact that
+_godliness_ was a mystery (1 Tim. 3:16); but he who peruses the history
+of the Papacy will be forced to declare with emphasis, "Without
+controversy great is the mystery of Romanism." She is also styled
+Babylon the Great. This name is derived from ancient Babylon. This city
+was the center of the earth's idolatry and stood first of all as the
+direct enemy of God's people. So, likewise, this church is the center of
+earth's spiritual idolatry. There are other harlots, or corrupt
+churches, in the world beside her; but she is the _mother_ of them all.
+They are all children by her side. Some of them greatly honor her and in
+deep veneration call her "_our holy mother church_;" but God brands her
+as the "mother of harlots and abominations of the earth."
+
+But the statement that she was a harlot merely, does not entirely
+describe her character. She was a _drunken_ harlot. Drunken with
+what--wine? No indeed; that were a very small sin for her. She was
+"drunken with the blood of the saints, and with the blood of the martyrs
+of Jesus." Romanists positively declare that their church never
+persecutes; but with the picture of this drunken prostitute before our
+eyes, we shall be hard to convince. To illustrate this point fully would
+be to write a book of martyrs much larger than the present work; so, for
+lack of space only, we shall have to content ourselves with merely
+bringing forward a few of many historical proofs showing _that they
+themselves_ claim the right to exterminate heretics.
+
+Innumerable provincial and national councils have issued the most cruel
+and bloody laws for the extermination of the Waldenses and other
+so-called heretics; such as the Councils of Oxford, Toledo, Avignon,
+Tours, Lavaur, Albi, Narbonne, Beziers, Tolosa, etc. Since Papists will
+assert that these had no authority to establish a doctrine of the church
+(although they clearly reflect its spirit), I remind the reader that
+some of their _General_ Councils have by their decrees pronounced the
+punishment of death for heresy. At least six of these highest judicial
+assemblies of the Romish church, with the Pope at their head, have
+authoritatively enjoined the persecution and extermination of heretics.
+Extracts from the Acts of these Councils could be given if space
+permitted. 1. The second General Council of Lateran (1139), in its
+twenty-third canon. 2. The third General Council of Lateran (1179),
+under Pope Alexander III. 3. The fourth General Council of Lateran
+(1215), under the inhuman Pope Innocent III., which exceeded in ferocity
+all similar decrees that had preceded it. 4. The sixteenth General
+Council, held at Constance in 1414. This Council, with Pope Martin
+present in person, condemned the reformers Huss and Jerome to be burned
+at the stake and then prevailed on the emperor Sigismund to violate the
+safe-conduct that he had given Huss, signed by his own hand, in which he
+guaranteed the reformer a safe return to Bohemia; and the inhuman
+sentence was carried out, with the haughty prelates standing by to
+satiate their eyes on the sight of human agony. This council also
+condemned the writings of Wickliffe and _ordered his bones to be dug up
+and burnt_, which savage sentence was afterwards carried into effect;
+and after lying in their grave for forty years, the remains of this
+first translator of the English Bible were reduced to ashes and thrown
+into the brook Swift. Well has the historian Fuller said, in reference
+to this subject, "The brook Swift did convey his ashes into Avon, the
+Avon into Severn, the Severn into the narrow seas, and they into the
+main ocean. And thus the ashes of Wickliffe are the emblem of his
+doctrie, which is now dispersed all over the world." 5. The Council of
+Sienna (1423), which was afterwards continued at Basil. 6. The fifth
+General Council of the Lateran (1514). The laws enacted in each
+succeeding Council were generally marked, if possible, with augmented
+barbarity.
+
+Says the learned Edgar, in his Variations of Popery: "The principle of
+persecution, being sanctioned not only by theologians, Popes and
+provincial synods but also by General Councils, _is a necessary and
+integral part of Romanism_. The Romish communion has, by its
+representatives, declared its right to compel men to renounce heterodoxy
+and embrace Catholicism, and to consign the obstinate to the civil power
+to be banished, tortured, or killed." St. Aquinas, whom Romanists call
+the "angelic Doctor," says, "Heretics are to be compelled by corporeal
+punishments, that they may adhere to the faith." Again, "Heretics may
+not only be excommunicated, but _justly killed_." He says that "the
+church consigns such to the secular judges _to be exterminated from the
+world by death_."
+
+Cardinal Bellarmine is the great champion of Romanism and expounder of
+its doctrines. He was the nephew of Pope Marcellus, and he is
+acknowledged to be a standard writer with Romanists. In the twenty-first
+and twenty-second chapters of the third book of his work entitled _De
+Laicis_, he enters into a regular argument to prove that the church has
+the right, and should exercise it, of punishing heretics with death. The
+heading is his, together with what follows.
+
+"Chapter XXI. _That heretics, condemned by the church, may be punished
+with temporal penalties and even death._ We will briefly show that the
+church has the _power and ought_ to cast off incorrigible heretics,
+especially those who have elapsed, and that the secular power ought to
+inflict on such temporal punishments and even death itself. 1. This may
+be proved from the Scripture. 2. It is proved from the opinions and laws
+of the emperors, _which the church has always approved_. 3. _It is
+proved by the laws of the church ... experience proves that there is no
+other remedy;_ for the church has tried step by step all remedies--first
+excommunication alone; then pecuniary penalties; afterward banishment;
+_and lastly has been forced to put them to death; to send them to their
+own place_.... There are three grounds on which reason shows that
+heretics should be put to death: the first is, Lest the wicked should
+injure the righteous; second, That by the punishment of a few many may
+be reformed. For many who were made torpid by impunity, are _roused by
+the fear of punishment_; AND THIS WE DAILY SEE IS THE RESULT WHERE THE
+INQUISITION FLOURISHES," etc.
+
+"Chapter XXII. _Objections answered._ It remains to answer the
+objections of Luther and other heretics. Argument 1. From the history of
+the church at large. 'The church,' says Luther, 'from the beginning even
+to this time, _has never burned a heretic_. Therefore it does not seem
+to be the mind of the Holy Spirit that they should be burnt!' [He surely
+misunderstood Luther.] I reply that this argument proves not the
+sentiment, but the ignorance, or impudence of Luther; FOR AS ALMOST AN
+INFINITE NUMBER WERE EITHER BURNED OR OTHERWISE PUT TO DEATH, Luther
+either did not know it, and was therefore ignorant; or if he knew it, he
+is convicted of impudence and falsehood,--for _that heretics were often
+burnt_ BY THE CHURCH may be proved by adducing a few from many examples.
+Argument 2. 'Experience shows that terror is not useful.' I reply
+EXPERIENCE PROVES THE CONTRARY--for the Donatists, Manicheans, and
+Albigenses WERE ROUTED AND ANNIHILATED BY ARMS," etc.
+
+So this high dignitary of the Catholic church, a cardinal, a nephew of
+one Pope and the special favorite of others, freely admits the charge so
+often laid to Popery by creditable historians--the butchering of an
+"infinite number" of people that differed from them--and here labors
+hard to uphold it as a principle of righteousness. Their bloody crusades
+against the innocent, unoffending Waldenses, Albigenses, and other
+peoples, in which thousands, and in the aggregate _millions_, were
+slaughtered like venomous reptiles, stand out on the page of history
+with a prominence that can not be mistaken; and they themselves can not
+deny it. Dowling has well said that their "history is written in lines
+of blood. Compared with the butcheries of holy men and women by the
+Papal Antichrist, the persecutions of the Pagan emperors of the first
+three centuries sink into comparative insignificance. For not a tithe of
+the blood of martyrs was shed by Paganism, that has been poured forth by
+Popery; and the persecutors of Pagan Rome never dreamed of the thousand
+ingenious contrivances of torture which the malignity of Popish
+inquisitors succeeded in inventing." P. 541.
+
+If any of my readers suppose that the character of Popery has changed
+with the lapse of ages, I must tell you that such is not the ease.
+Popery is unchangeable and this her ablest advocates declare. Chas.
+Butler, in the work he wrote in reply to Southey's book of the church,
+says, "It is most true that the Roman Catholics believe the doctrines of
+their church to be unchangeable; and that it is a tenet of their creed,
+that what their faith ever has been, such it was from the beginning,
+_such it is now_, and SUCH IT EVER WILL BE." A copy of the eleventh
+edition of The Faith of Our Fathers, published in Baltimore, Maryland,
+in 1883, lies before me. It was written by Archbishop (now Cardinal)
+James Gibbons, the highest authority of the Roman Catholic church in
+this country. In page 95 he says: "It is a marvelous fact, worthy of
+record, that in the whole history of the church, from the nineteenth
+century to the first, no solitary example can be adduced to show that
+any Pope or General Council ever revoked a decree of faith or morals
+enacted by any preceding pontiff or council. Her record in the past
+ought to be a sufficient warrant that she will _tolerate no doctrinal
+variations in the future_." So the doctrine of her inherent right to
+persecute and slay every one who disagrees with her, which has been
+enacted by Pontiffs and General Councils and so carried out in the past,
+is still in vogue and would now be enforced were it in her power to do
+so.
+
+While this statement of Gibbons' shows the unchangeable spirit of
+Popery, still it is the basest presumption upon the historical knowledge
+of the reader. The facts are that the _official_ acts of some of their
+Popes and General Councils have been so far wrong that Romanists
+themselves have been compelled to admit it. Thus the _sixth_ General
+Council, which was held at Constantinople in 680, and which every
+Catholic accepts as Ecumenical, condemned, in the strongest terms, Pope
+Honorius as a Monothelite _heretic_. Let them attempt to deny it, and we
+will bring forward our proof. Romish authors themselves admit it, the
+well-known Dupin with the rest, as appears by the following extract from
+his writings: "The Council had as much reason to censure him as Sergius,
+Paulus, Peter, and the other Patriarchs oL Constantinople." He adds in
+language yet more emphatic, "This will stand for certain, then, that
+Honorius _was condemned_, AND JUSTLY TOO, AS A HERETIC, by the sixth
+General Council." Dupin's Eccl. History, Vol. II, p. 16.
+
+The Decretals of Isodore furnish another example of Papal infallibility
+(?). For ages these documents were the chief instrument of the Popes in
+extending their power and the proof of the righteousness of their
+assumptions to excessive temporal authority. Wickliffe declared them
+false and apocryphal. For this he was condemned by the sixteenth
+_General Council_, held at Constance in 1414, and his bones ordered dug
+up and burnt because of his daring impudence. The spurious character of
+these false decretals have since been proved beyond the shadow of a
+doubt; and since it is impossible to deny it longer, it is admitted even
+by Romanists. So, after all, this _infallible_ Council was wrong, the
+Papists themselves being the judges.
+
+Pope Benedict IX. was guilty of such flagitious crimes that he became an
+object of public abhorrence, and he finally _sold_ the Popedom. One of
+his infallible (?) successors in the Papal chair, Pope Victor III.,
+pronounced this infallible (?) profligate a person "abandoned to all
+manner of vice. A _successor of_ SIMON THE SORCERER, and NOT OF SIMON
+THE APOSTLE." I do not question the truth of this assertion, but what
+becomes of their boasted uninterrupted apostolical succession? Baronius,
+the Popish annalist, confesses that Pope Sergius III. was "the slave of
+every vice, and the most wicked of men." Among other horrid acts Platina
+relates that he _rescinded the acts_ of Pope Formosus, compelled those
+whom he had ordained to be re-ordained, dragged his dead body from the
+sepulchre, beheaded him as though he were alive, and then threw him into
+the Tiber! This Pope cohabited with an infamous prostitute named Marozia
+and by her had a son named John, who afterwards ascended the Papal
+throne, through the influence of his licentious mother, under the name
+of John XI. So the unlawful amours of Sergius produced this infallible,
+necessary link in the _holy_ chain of uninterrupted apostolical
+succession! It must be remembered, also, that the Popes have for ages
+laid claim themselves to infallibility; and in the last General Council
+of that body, held at the Vatican in 1870, it was declared a dogma of
+the church. Romanists will tell us that this decree refers only to his
+official acts, and not to his personal character; but official acts have
+been the main thing under consideration in the case of Sergius,
+Honorius, and Benedict. But if such monsters of vice can produce good,
+holy, infallible acts, as Papists declare, then Jesus Christ is
+mistaken; for he declared positively that "a corrupt tree _bringeth
+forth evil fruit_ ... neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good
+fruit." Mat. 7:17, 18. "God forbid: yea, let God be true, but every man
+a liar." Rom. 3:4. During these dark ages thousands of priests, who were
+by the laws of the church denied their Scriptural right of possessing a
+wife (1 Cor. 7:9, etc.), lived openly with concubines; and the Council
+of Toledo decreed that they should not be condemned therefor, provided
+they were content with one.
+
+But the devil produced his master-piece of iniquity in the person of
+Roderic Borgia, who ascended the Papal throne in 1492 under the name of
+Alexander VI. The utmost limits assigned to Papal depravity were
+realized in him, so that the very name Borgia has come to be used as a
+designation of any person unusually wicked. Says Waddington: "The
+ecclesiastical records of fifteen centuries ... contain no name so
+loathsome, no crimes so foul as his.... Not one among the many zealous
+annalists of the Roman church has breathed a whisper in his praise....
+He publicly cohabited with a Roman matron named Vanozia, by whom he had
+five acknowledged children. Neither in his manners nor in his language
+did he affect any regard for morality or decency; and one of the
+earliest acts of his pontificate was, to celebrate, with scandalous
+magnificence, in his own palace, the marriage of his daughter Lucretia.
+On one occasion this prodigy of vice gave a splendid entertainment,
+within the walls of the Vatican, to no less than fifty public
+prostitutes at once, and that in the presence of his daughter Lucretia,
+at which entertainment deeds of darkness were done, over which decency
+must throw a veil; and yet this monster of vice was, according to Papist
+... the vicar of God upon earth, and was addressed by the title of HIS
+HOLINESS!!" But why stir this cesspool of filth any longer? Is not that
+church of which Alexander VI. was for eleven years the crowned and
+anointed head--a necessary link in the boasted chain of _holy_
+apostolical succession, the pretended vicar of Christ upon earth--is it
+not, I ask, fitly described by the pen of inspiration "MOTHER OF HARLOTS
+AND ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH," as she reeled onward in the career of
+ages, "drunken with the blood of the saints"?
+
+ 7. And the angel said unto me, Wherefore didst thou marvel? I
+ will tell thee the mystery of the woman, and of the beast that
+ carriest her, which hath the seven heads and ten horns.
+
+ 8. The beast that thou sawest was, and is not; and shall ascend
+ out of the bottomless pit, and go into perdition: and they that
+ dwell on the earth shall wonder, whose names were not written in
+ the book of life from the foundation of the world, when they
+ behold the beast that was, and is not, and yet is.
+
+ 9. And here is the mind which hath wisdom. The seven heads are
+ seven mountains, on which the woman sitteth.
+
+ 10. And there are seven kings; five are fallen, and one is, and
+ the other is not yet come; and when he cometh, he must continue
+ a short space.
+
+ 11. And the beast that was, and is not, even he is the eighth,
+ and is of the seven, and goeth into perdition.
+
+ 12. And the ten horns which thou sawest are ten kings, which
+ have received no kingdom as yet; but receive power as kings one
+ hour with the beast.
+
+ 13. These have one mind, and shall give their power and strength
+ unto the beast.
+
+ 14. These shall make war with the Lamb, and the Lamb shall
+ overcome them: for he is Lord of lords, and King of kings: and
+ they that are with him are called, and chosen, and faithful.
+
+The angel promises to explain "the mystery of the woman and of the beast
+that carried her." The beast is the same as the secular beast with seven
+heads and ten horns, described in chapter 13. An explanation of its
+heads and horns has already been given. The expression "the seven heads
+are seven mountains, on which the woman sitteth, and there are seven
+kings," requires further explanation. Many have understood the mountains
+to signify the seven mountains on which the city of Rome is said to be
+built; but that is adopting the literal mode of interpretation, and is
+contrary to the laws of symbolic language. The more obvious meaning is
+that the seven heads represent seven mountains and also seven kings; but
+this probably is not the idea intended. The heads of a beast are not the
+proper symbol of mountains. The fact, too, that the woman is represented
+as sitting upon these mountains, shows that they are to be taken as a
+symbol, as well as the woman, and not the object symbolized. They are,
+then, the same as the heads and denote the seven kings or seven forms of
+government under which the Roman empire subsisted.
+
+The seventh and last head has not yet been identified. Before
+considering it, however, I wish to call attention to another point that
+has already been referred to. The beast that John here saw, with the
+seven heads and ten horns, was Rome under the Papal power. Did new Rome
+in reality have the seven heads? No. The dragon John saw in chapter 12
+is represented as having seven heads and ten horns, and signified Rome
+under the Pagan power. Did old Rome really possess the ten horns? No.
+According to verse 12 in this chapter, they were to arise future of
+John's time. But notice carefully that the seven heads, which according
+to this description, belonged to the beast sustaining the Papal power in
+after years, are here explained by the angel as signifying the very
+forms of government by which _Pagan_ Rome subsisted. "Five _are fallen_
+[a past event], one _is_ [exists at this present time], and the other
+_is not yet come_." So according to divine interpretation, the same
+heads and horns serve for both the dragon and the beast. This could not
+possibly be a true representation unless they were both in reality the
+_same beast_, they being represented as two only for the purpose of
+describing the two phases of Roman history--Pagan and Papal.
+
+With this point established, that these two forms of Roman history are
+the same beast, we are now prepared to understand the statement that the
+beast "was and is not, and yet is." This is equivalent to saying that
+the beast existed, it ceased to exist, and then it came into existence
+again. This was exactly the history of Rome. Its downfall under the
+Pagan form was described under the fourth trumpet as an eclipse of the
+sun, moon and stars, so that they shone not for a third part of the day
+and night. For a time it seemed not to exist. A little later the eclipse
+is lifted; the beast exists again under the Papal form. In this is set
+forth clearly the wounding and the healing of the beast. The wound was
+inflicted on its sixth, or Imperial, head (for the first five had
+already fallen, according to the historical facts just related), being
+accomplished by the hordes of Northern barbarians overturning the empire
+of the West. It appeared for a time that the beast was indeed wounded
+unto death; but not so: to the surprise of all, he survived under the
+form of the seventh head. At this point the question is sure to be
+asked, How could the beast continue to live if its seventh head was to
+continue but "a short space"? This is accounted for by the fact that
+there was what might be appropriately called an eighth head, but which
+was in reality of the seven. "And the beast that was, and is not, even
+he is the eighth, and is of the seven." Verse 11.
+
+The identification of the seventh head will now make the matter
+complete. The facts all meet in the Carlovingian empire, or the empire
+of Charlemagne. In the year 774 Charlemagne completed the work begun by
+Pepin twenty years before and overthrew the kingdom of the Lombards in
+Italy, which was the last of the three horns plucked up before the
+little horn of Daniel. By this victory he became complete master of
+Italy, and he received the title Patrician of Rome. This was not merely
+an honorary title, such as had for ages been conferred upon certain
+individuals; but it was a distinct form of civil government and supreme,
+taking the same rank with that of the Consular, the Decemvirate, the
+Triumvirate, etc., in the earlier history of the nation. It lasted,
+however, only "a short space," or twenty-six years, when Charlemagne,
+having extended his conquests over all the western part of Europe,
+assumed the Imperial title and thus revived the empire of Rome in the
+West under its Gothic form. In his Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,
+Gibbon says: "In the twenty-six years that elapsed between the conquest
+of Lombardy and his Imperial coronation, Rome, which had been delivered
+by the sword, was subject, as his own, to the scepter, of Charlemagne.
+The people swore allegiance to his person and family; in his name, money
+was coined, and justice was administered, and the election of Popes was
+examined and confirmed by his authority--except an original and
+self-inherent claim of sovereignity, there was not any prerogative
+remaining which the title of emperor could add to the Patrician of
+Rome." This decisive testimony by the highest authority on the subject
+shows conclusively that all the power of sovereignty resided in
+Charlemagne as the Patrician of Rome, and that this, therefore, is a
+proper head to be ranked with the other six that preceded it.[14]
+
+[Footnote 14: Commentators frequently identify the seventh head with the
+Exarchate of Ravenna. After the overthrow of the kingdom of the
+Ostrogoths in Italy by Belisarius, the general of Justinian, about the
+middle of the sixth century, the territory became subject to the emperor
+of the Eastern empire and was ruled by him through an Exarch whose place
+of residence was Ravenna. This Exarchate (sometimes called _Patriciate_)
+continued until about the middle of the eighth century, when it was
+terminated by Astolphus, king of the Lombards, who made Ravenna the
+capital of the Lombardic kingdom in 752. Three years later the Lombards
+were defeated by Pepin, who made the Holy See a present of the lands he
+conquered from them--the origin of the temporal power of the Popes.
+Pepin was succeeded by his son Charlemagne, who was appointed
+_Patrician_ of Rome, by the Pope, in 774. During the last half century
+that the Exarchate of Ravenna remained its existence was but little more
+than a name, the real power of government being usurped by the Papacy.
+It could hardly be considered an inconsistency were we to interpret the
+seventh head as signifying both the Patriciate of Ravenna and the
+Patriciate of Charlemagne that closely followed it; but in the present
+work I have restricted its application to the latter form because of its
+distinctive characteristic as constituting a supreme civil power
+entirely independent of the empire of the East, and because of its
+importance in the revival of the empire of the West.]
+
+This head, however, continued only "a short space"; and an eighth arose
+on Christmas, the first day of the year 800 (as time was then reckoned),
+when Charlemagne was crowned emperor of Rome, and thus revived the
+empire of the West. This eighth head, however, was "of the seven"; for
+it was the same as the sixth, both being Imperial--the first being in
+the Augustan line, and the other in the Carlovingian, and separated from
+each other by the seventh, or Patriciate. Considered one way, there were
+eight heads, but two of them were alike, hence only seven; for the
+eighth was of the seven. According to verse 11 it was under the eighth
+head that the beast subsisted at the time he was carrying the woman of
+this chapter, which exactly accords with the historical facts in the
+case; and the same was continued in a line of emperors reaching down to
+the time of the French Revolution.
+
+The ten horns had "received no kingdom as yet." This signifies that at
+the time when the Revelation was given they had not yet arisen. When
+they did come into existence they were to receive power as kings with
+the beast and were to give to it their power and strength. It is a
+singular fact that a distinct head should continue to exist after these
+horns had arisen and developed into powerful kingdoms; but herein the
+remarkable accuracy of prophecy is clearly shown. It is said that they
+should make war with the Lamb and that the Lamb should overcome them.
+Some think that this has reference to the persecution of the saints
+during the Dark Ages; but it seems to me that it would have been stated
+differently if such were its meaning. It may be a prophetical reference
+to the battle of Armageddon, which will be terminated by the coming of
+the Son of God himself to overthrow completely all the powers of
+wickedness.
+
+ 15. And he saith unto me, The waters which thou sawest, where
+ the whore sitteth, are peoples, and multitudes, and nations, and
+ tongues.
+
+ 16. And the ten horns which thou sawest upon the beast, these
+ shall hate the whore, and shall make her desolate and naked, and
+ shall eat her flesh, and burn her with fire.
+
+ 17. For God hath put in their hearts to fulfil his will, and to
+ agree, and give their kingdom unto the beast, until the words of
+ God shall be fulfilled.
+
+ 18. And the woman which thou sawest is that great city, which
+ reigneth over the kings of the earth.
+
+The special thoughts contained in these verses have been so far
+explained already that it is unnecessary to go over the same ground
+again. Already the civil powers of Europe are beginning to cast this
+woman aside as an old, wrinkled, haggard prostitute is cast off by her
+lovers. Already they have deprived her of all temporal authority such as
+she possessed in guiding this beast of chapter 17, as explained under
+the fifth plague in the preceding chapter. Whether they are destined to
+become a still greater enemy to her, the future will determine.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+ And after these things I saw another angel come down from
+ heaven, having great power; and the earth was lightened with his
+ glory.
+
+ 2. And he cried mightily with a strong voice, saying, Babylon
+ the great is fallen, is fallen, and is become the habitation of
+ devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of every
+ unclean and hateful bird.
+
+ 3. For all nations have drunk of the wine of the wrath of her
+ fornication, and the kings of the earth have committed
+ fornication with her, and the merchants of the earth are waxed
+ rich through the abundance of her delicacies.
+
+A movement of mighty power is symbolized in these verses. The chronology
+of the events described in the preceding chapter brings us down to the
+time when the ten horns turn against the Papacy by depriving her of her
+temporal authority. This, as we have already seen, was completely
+fulfilled in 1870 and constituted the fifth plague. In the description
+of the sixth plague which followed, it was shown that the great city
+which was invaded was composed of three parts--Paganism (the modern form
+of the dragon power), Catholicism, and Protestantism. The same great
+city is here brought to view, and the angel from heaven, with a mighty
+voice, cries, "Babylon the Great is fallen, is fallen." This fall of
+Babylon can not signify a literal destruction; for there are certain
+events to take place in Babylon after her fall which entirely precludes
+that idea; for instance, the calling of God's people out of her, in
+order that they may not receive of her plagues. In these plagues is
+embraced her literal destruction, or complete overthrow. The fall is
+therefore a moral one; for the result of it is that Babylon becomes "the
+habitation of devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of
+every unclean and hateful bird."
+
+Protestants who make any attempt to interpret these prophecies usually
+limit the designation "Babylon the Great" in these verses to the church
+of Rome, because the woman symbolizing the apostate church in the
+preceding chapter is denominated "Babylon the Great." Ver. 5. But the
+same verse also declares her to be the "_Mother_ of harlots;" and if she
+as a degraded woman stands as the representative of a corrupt church,
+her unchaste daughters, also, must symbolize churches that are her
+descendants; and if the real name of the _mother_ is Babylon, as stated,
+the proper name of her harlot daughters must be Babylon also. Whether,
+therefore, the mother or the daughters are referred to, it is all
+"Babylon the Great," because it is all the same family and is a part of
+that "GREAT CITY which reigneth over the kings of the earth." Chap.
+17:18. We must, therefore, have something besides the mere title
+"Babylon the Great" to determine which division of the great city is
+referred to in a given instance--whether Pagan, Papal, or Protestant.
+
+A careful study of the prophecy now under consideration will show that
+it has particular reference to the Protestant division of Babylon. It
+contained many of God's children; whereas Paganism was always a false
+religion and never held any of God's saints. Under the reign of
+Catholicism, the people of God are represented in all the symbols of
+this book relating thereto as existing entirely separate from that
+communion. The description of this apostate church given in the
+preceding chapter shows clearly that instead of being partly composed of
+God's saints, she was their most bitter and relentless persecutor, yea,
+was "_drunken with the blood of the saints_, and with the blood of the
+martyrs of Jesus." This is definite proof that the present phase of
+Babylon under consideration is the Protestant division; and her moral
+fall is the grand signal for the escape of God's people who have partly
+composed her number, as the fall of ancient Babylon was for the escape
+of the Israelites. In their younger days the Protestant organizations
+(symbolized by the daughters) were of much better character than the
+mother church from whom they descended. Many of them started out on
+reform. While a spiritual people, God worked with them; but when they
+made their image to the beast, they suddenly declined, and this voice
+from heaven finally declares them to be in a fallen condition--entirely
+void of salvation, except a very few chosen saints that have not defiled
+their garments, contained therein.
+
+That this application of the term _Babylon_ is correct, and also, the
+fallen condition ascribed to her in accordance with the facts, I will
+prove by the following testimonies of Protestants themselves. The first
+is from Vision of the Ages; or, Lectures on the Apocalypse, by B.W.
+Johnson, member of the Christian sect.
+
+"It is needful to inquire what the term _Babylon_ means. It occurs
+several times in the New Testament. Here (in the Apocalypse) it is
+spoken of as 'that great city,' and her fall is doomed 'because she hath
+made all nations drunk with the wine of her fornication.' In Rev. 17:5,
+a scarlet harlot is seen sitting upon the seven-headed and ten-horned
+monster, and upon her forehead is written, 'Mystery, Babylon the Great.'
+With this woman the kings of the earth are said to have committed
+fornication. In chapter 18 the fall of the great city, Babylon is
+detailed at length, and it is again said that all the kings of the earth
+have committed fornication with her. The harlot with Babylon stamped on
+her brow, and the great city of fornication styled Babylon, in chapters
+14 and 18, are one and the same existence.
+
+"There is an ancient city of Babylon often mentioned in the Old
+Testament, but ages before John wrote, it had ceased to be inhabited,
+the only dwellers among its lonely ruins were howling beasts and hissing
+serpents. It has never been rebuilt to this day and has passed away
+forever. John refers therefore not to old Babylon, but to some power yet
+unseen (when he was upon the earth), that should be revealed in due
+time, and of which old Babylon was a symbol. Let us notice some of the
+features of ancient Babylon.
+
+"1. On that site took place the confusion of tongues which divided those
+who before had been of one speech and one family, into various tribes
+and schisms at variance with each other and of various tongues. The word
+Babylon, a memorial of this event, means confusion, and is derived from
+Babel.
+
+"2. Old Babylon persecuted the people of God and destroyed the temple in
+Jerusalem.
+
+"3. It carried the people of God into captivity.
+
+"4. It was a mighty, resistless universal empire. The antitype, the
+spiritual Babylon, must correspond. There is a power that exhibits all
+these characteristics. By apostasy from the truth it originated the
+schism which has divided the family of God into different sects and
+parties which speak a different spiritual language. It has carried the
+church into a long captivity by binding upon it the thralldom of
+superstition. It has been a constant persecutor of the saints, and has
+enjoyed an almost universal dominion. That power is the woman that sits
+upon the seven-headed beast ... the false woman, symbolical of a false
+church, the great apostate spiritual dominion of Rome. And we may add,
+out of which have come--directly or indirectly--_all the religious sects
+of the present day_."
+
+Dr. Barnes says: "The word _Babylon_ became the emblem of all that was
+haughty and oppressive, and especially of all that persecuted the church
+of God. The word here (Rev. 18:4) must be used to denote some power that
+resembled the ancient and literal Babylon in these characteristics. The
+literal Babylon was no more; but the name might be used properly to
+denote a similar power."
+
+Wm. Kinkade, in Bible Doctrine, page 249, says, "I think Christ has a
+true church on earth, but its members are scattered among the various
+denominations, and are more or less under the influence of mystery
+Babylon and her daughters."
+
+Alexander Campbell says: "A reformation of Popery was attempted in
+Europe full three centuries ago. It ended in a Protestant hierarchy, and
+swarms of dissenters. Protestantism has been reformed into
+Presbyterianism, that into Congregationalism, and that into Baptistism,
+etc., etc. Methodism has attempted to reform all, but has reformed
+itself into many forms of Wesleyanism. All of them retain in their
+bosom--in their ecclesiastical organizations, worship, doctrines, and
+observances--various relics of Popery. They are at best a reformation of
+Popery, and only reformations in part. The doctrines and traditions of
+men yet impair the power and progress of the gospel in their hands." On
+Baptism, p.15.
+
+Again, he says: "The worshiping establishments now in operation
+throughout Christendom, increased and cemented by their respective
+voluminous confessions of faith, and their ecclesiastical constitutions,
+are not churches of Jesus Christ, but the legitimate daughters of that
+mother of harlots, the church of Rome." How any man could possess as
+much light on this subject as did Mr. Campbell, and then build a sect
+himself, is more than I can understand.
+
+Lorenzo Dow says of the Romish Church: "If she be the mother, who are
+the daughters? It must be the corrupt, national, established churches
+that came out of her." Dow's Life, p. 542.
+
+In the Religious Encyclopaedia, Article Antichrist, we read: "The writer
+of the book of Revelation tells us he heard a voice from heaven saying,
+'Come out of her, my people, that ye partake not of her sins, and
+receive not of her plagues.' If such persons are to be found in the
+'mother of harlots,' with much less hesitation may it be inferred that
+they are connected with her unchaste daughters, those national churches
+which are founded upon what are called Protestant principles."
+
+In the Encyclopaedia of Religious Knowledge we read: "An important
+question, however, says Mr. Jones, stills remains for inquiry: Is
+Antichrist confined to the church of Rome? The answer is readily
+returned in the affirmative by Protestants in general; and happy had it
+been for the world had that been the case. But although we are fully
+warranted to consider that church as 'the mother of harlots,' the truth
+is that by whatsoever arguments we succeed in fixing that odius charge
+upon her, we shall, by parity of reasoning, be obliged to allow other
+national churches to be her unchaste daughters, and for this plain
+reason, among others, because in their very constitution and tendency
+they are hostile to the nature of the kingdom of Christ."
+
+One of Martin Luther's guests remarked that the world might continue
+fifty years, and he replied: "Pray God that it may not exist so long;
+matters would be even worse than they have been. There would rise up
+infinite sects and schisms, which are at present hidden in men's hearts
+and nature. No; may the Lord come at once, for there is no amendment to
+be expected."
+
+Mr. Hartly, a learned churchman, has remarked as follows: "There are
+many prophecies which declare the fall of the ecclesiastical powers of
+the Christian world, and though each church seems to flatter itself with
+the hope of being exempted, yet it is very plain that the prophetical
+characters belong to all. They all have left the true, pure, simple
+religion, and teach for doctrines the commandments of men."
+
+Says Mr. Simpson, in Plea for Religion: "We Protestants, too, read the
+declaration of the third angel against the worshipers of the beast and
+his image, and make ourselves easy under the awful denunciation by
+applying it exclusively to the church of Rome; never dreaming that they
+are equally applicable not only to the English, but to every church
+establishment in Christendom, which retains any of the marks of the
+beast. For though the Pope and the church of Rome is at the head of the
+grand twelve hundred and sixty years' delusion, yet all other churches,
+of whatever denomination, whether established or tolerated, which
+partake of the same spirit, or have instituted doctrines and ceremonies
+inimical to the pure and unadulterated gospel of Christ, shall sooner or
+later share in the fate of that immense fabric of human ordinances."
+
+Says Mr. Hopkins: "There is no reason to consider the antichristian
+spirit and practices confined to that which is now called the church of
+Rome. The Protestant churches have much of Antichrist in them, and are
+far from being wholly reformed from the corruptions and wickedness, in
+doctrine and practice, in it. Some churches may be more pure and may
+have proceeded farther in a reformation than others; but where can the
+church be found which is thoroughly purged from her abominations? None
+are wholly clear from an antichristian spirit and the fruits of it....
+And as the church of Rome will have a large share in the cup of
+indignation and wrath which will be poured out, so all the Christian
+world will have a distinguished portion of it: as the inhabitants of it
+are much more guilty than others. There is great reason to conclude that
+the world, particularly that part of it called Christian and Protestant,
+will yet make greater and more rapid advances in all kinds of moral
+corruption and open wickedness, till it will come to that state in which
+it will be fully ripe and prepared to be cut down by the sickle of
+divine justice and wrath."
+
+Mr. O. Scott (Wesleyan Methodist) says: "The church is as deeply
+infected with a desire for worldly gain as the world. Most of the
+denominations of the present day might be called _churches of the
+world_, with more propriety than churches of Christ. The churches have
+so far gone from primitive Christianity that they need a fresh
+regeneration--a new kind of religion."
+
+Said T. DeWitt Talmage: "I simply state a fact when I say that in many
+places the church is surrendering, and the world is conquering.... There
+is a mighty host in the Christian church, positively professing
+Christianity, who do not believe the Bible, out and out and in and
+in.... Oh! we have magnificient church machinery in this country; we
+have sixty thousand American ministers; we have costly music; we have
+great Sunday-schools; and yet I give you the appalling statistics that
+in the last twenty-five years, laying aside last year, the statistics of
+which I have not yet seen,--within the last twenty-five years the
+churches of God in this country have averaged _less than two conversions
+a year_ each! There has been an average of four or five deaths in the
+churches. How soon, at that rate, will this world be brought to God? We
+gain two; we lose four. Eternal God! what will this come to?"
+
+Bishop Roberts said: "The popular religion of this country is not the
+religion of the New Testament. It has some of its features but not all.
+It is lacking in grand fundamental elements. It answers many good
+purposes--restrains, refines, elevates, and gives to society a high
+grade of civilization; but fails to secure the great end which
+Christianity is designed to accomplish--the salvation of the soul. It
+dazzles but to blind, it promises but to deceive; it allures by worldly
+considerations to a heaven of purity, which no worldling can enter; it
+gives to its votaries, who long to eat of forbidden fruit, the assurance
+of impunity from the threatened evils, and leads them on by siren
+strains from the Paradise of purity into the broad road which ends at
+last in the blackness of the darkness of an eternal night of despair!"
+
+Says the Golden Rule: "The Protestants are outdoing the Popes in
+splendid, extravagant folly in church building. Thousands on thousands
+are expended in gay and costly ornaments to gratify pride and a wicked
+ambition, that might and should go to redeem the perishing millions!
+Does the evil, the folly, and the madness of these proud, formal,
+fashionable worshiper, stop here? These splendid monuments of Popish
+pride, upon which millions are squandered in our cities, virtually
+exclude the poor for whom Christ died, and for whom he came especially
+to preach."
+
+The report of the Michigan Yearly Conference, even as long ago as 1851,
+published in the True Wesleyan of Nov. 15, says: "The world, commercial,
+political, and ecclesiastical are alike, and are together going in the
+broad way that leads to death. Politics, commerce, and nominal religion,
+all connive at sin, reciprocally aid each other, and unite to crush the
+poor. Falsehood is unblushingly uttered in the forum and in the pulpit;
+and _sins that would shock the moral sensibilities of the heathen, go
+unrebuked in all the great denominations of our land_. These churches
+are like the Jewish church when the Savior exclaimed, 'Woe unto you,
+scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites.'"
+
+Robert Atkins, in a sermon preached in London, says: "The truly
+righteous are diminished from the earth, and no man layeth it to heart.
+The professors of religion of the present day, in every church, are
+lovers of the world, conformers to the world. Lovers of
+creature-comfort, and aspirers after respectability. They are called to
+_suffer_ with Christ, but they shrink even from reproach. Apostasy,
+_apostasy_, APOSTASY, is engraven on the very front of every church; and
+did they know it, and did they feel it, there might be hope; but alas!
+they cry 'We are rich, and increased in goods, and stand in need of
+nothing.'"
+
+I have by no means exhausted the supply of similar testimonies of
+Protestants now before me, but for lack of space I must conclude. In the
+face of these amazing facts can any one deny that Protestantism is a
+part of great Babylon and is in a fallen condition?
+
+"The merchants of the earth are waxed rich through the abundance of her
+delicacies." A certain writer on this text has said: "Who take the lead
+in all the extravagancies of the age? Church-members. Who load their
+tables with the richest and choicest viands? Church-members. Who are
+foremost in extravagance in dress, and all costly attire?
+Church-members. Who are the very personification of pride and arrogance?
+Church-members. Where shall we look for the very highest exhibition of
+the luxury, even show, and pride of life, resulting from the vanity and
+sin of the race? Answer, To a modern church-assembly on a pleasant
+Sunday." Though this writer interpreted the text literally, yet he spoke
+a vast amount of truth, as every one knows.
+
+Consider, too, the wickedness carried on everywhere in sect Babylon
+unrebuked, with the preachers ofttimes in the lead. Shows, festivals,
+frolics, grab-bag parties, cake-walk lotteries, kissing-bees, etc., etc.
+If the apostle were here to-day and we should inform him of a modern
+church entertainment where a bared female foot, projecting from beneath
+a curtain, was sold to the highest gentleman bidder, who had the
+privilege of kissing its owner and taking her to supper, he would
+probably answer, "Have I not told you, 'Babylon is fallen'?" If his
+attention was called to the fact that the members of a prominent church,
+in a novel entertainment, displayed the likeness of a donkey, minus the
+tail, while the members one by one were blindfolded, and, amid the
+uproarous laughter of the crowd assembled, were given the detached part
+to see who could place it the nearest where it belonged, he would say
+with double emphasis, "_Have I not told you_, 'BABYLON THE GREAT IS
+FALLEN, IS FALLEN, AND IS BECOME THE HABITATION OF DEVILS, AND THE HOLD
+OF EVERY FOUL SPIRIT, AND A CAGE OF EVERY UNCLEAN AND HATEFUL BIRD'?"
+The "abominations" are by no means confined to the _mother_ in the
+Revelation, but are also to be found in abundance in connection with her
+harlot daughters.
+
+ 4. And I heard another voice from heaven, saying, Come out of
+ her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that
+ ye receive not of her plagues.
+
+ 5. For her sins have reached unto heaven, and God hath
+ remembered her iniquities.
+
+ 6. Reward her even as she rewarded yon, and double unto her
+ double according to her works: in the cup which she hath filled
+ fill to her double.
+
+ 7. How much she hath glorified herself, and lived deliciously,
+ so much torment and sorrow give her: for she saith in her heart,
+ I sit a queen, and am no widow, and shall see no sorrow.
+
+ 8. Therefore shall her plagues come in one day, death, and
+ mourning, and famine; and she shall be utterly burned with fire:
+ for strong is the Lord God who judgeth her.
+
+Here we have a number of important truths brought before us--first, that
+God had a people in Babylon who up to this time were free from her
+contaminations; second, that they received a positive call from heaven
+to "come out"; third, that all who refused to obey the heavenly command
+would become partakers of her sins and receive of her plagues; fourth,
+that those who came out were to pour the strongest judgments upon
+Babylon--"reward her even as she rewarded you, and double unto her
+double according to her works: in the cup which she hath filled, fill to
+her double." It is evident that the "torment and sorrow" which God's
+people give Babylon after their departure is not a temporal
+retaliation--for they never indulge in such, and the Word of God forbids
+it--but is altogether of a spiritual nature; hence the fierce judgment
+they inflict is executing the Word of truth, which brings to light all
+the wickedness and abominations contained therein. "Death, and mourning,
+and famine" only remain. This symbolizes that all spiritual life has
+departed, while famine and mourning are left. That such is the actual
+fact is shown by the following lamentation of the late Bishop R.S.
+Foster concerning his own sect, the Methodist Episcopal:
+
+"The ball, the theatre, nude and lewd art, social luxuries, with all
+their loose moralities, are making inroads into the sacred enclosure of
+the church; and as a satisfaction for all this worldliness, Christians
+are making a great deal of Lent and Easter and Good Friday, and church
+ornamentations. It is the old trick of Satan. The Jewish church struck
+on that rock; the Romish church was wrecked on the same; and the
+Protestant church is fast reaching the same doom.
+
+"Our great dangers as we see them, are assimilation to the world,
+neglect of the poor, substitution of the form for the fact of godliness,
+abandonment of discipline, a hireling ministry, an impure gospel, which
+summed up is a fashionable church. That Methodists should be liable to
+such an outcome, and that there should be signs of it in a hundred years
+from the 'sail-loft,' seems almost the miracle of history; but who that
+looks about him to-day can fail to see the fact?
+
+"Do not Methodists, in violation of God's Word and their own discipline,
+dress as extravagantly and as fashionably as any other class? Do not the
+ladies, and even the wives and daughters of the ministry, put on 'gold
+and pearls and costly array'? Would not the plain dress insisted upon by
+John Wesley and Bishop Asbury, and worn by Hester Ann Rodgers, Lady
+Huntington, and many others equally distinguished, be now regarded in
+Methodist circles as fanaticism? Can any one going into the Methodist
+church in any of our chief cities distinguish the attire of the
+communicants from that of the theater and ball-goers? Is not worldliness
+seen in the music? Elaborately dressed and ornamented choirs, who in
+many cases make no profession of religion and are often sneering
+skeptics, go through a cold artistic or operatic performance, which is
+as much in harmony with spiritual worship as an opera or theater. Under
+such worldly performances spirituality is frozen to death.
+
+"Formerly every Methodist attended class and gave testimony of
+experimental religion. Now the class-meeting is attended by very few,
+and in many churches abandoned. Seldom the stewards, trustees and elders
+of the church attend class. Formerly nearly every Methodist prayed,
+testified or exhorted in prayer-meeting. Now but very few are heard.
+Formerly shouts and praises were heard; now such demostrations of holy
+enthusiasm and joy are regarded as fanaticism.
+
+"Worldly socials, and fairs, festivals, concerts and such like have
+taken the place of religious gatherings, revival meetings, class and
+prayer meetings of earlier days. How true that the Methodist discipline
+is a dead letter! Its rules forbid the wearing of gold or pearls or
+costly array; yet no one ever thinks of disciplining its members for
+violating them. They forbid the reading of such books and the taking of
+such diversions as do not minister to godliness, yet the church itself
+goes to frolics and festivals and fairs, which destroy the spiritual
+life of the young, as well as the old. The extent to which this is now
+carried on is appalling. The _spiritual death it carries in its train_
+will only be known when _the millions it has swept into hell_ shall
+stand before the judgment.
+
+"The early Methodist ministers went forth to sacrifice and to suffer for
+Christ. They sought not places of ease and affluence, but of privation
+and suffering. They gloried not in their big salaries, fine parsonages,
+and refined congregations, but in the souls that had been won for Jesus.
+Oh, _how changed!_ A hireling ministry will be a feeble, a timid, a
+truckling, a timeserving ministry, without faith, endurance, and holy
+power. Methodism formerly dealt in the great central truth. Now the
+pulpits deal largely in the generalities and in popular lectures. The
+glorious doctrine of entire sanctification is rarely heard and seldom
+witnessed in the pulpits."
+
+This lengthy quotation shows clearly the spiritual condition of
+Methodism, and certainly she is no worse than the rest. God is calling
+his people out of "all the places where they have been scattered in the
+cloudy and dark day." Ezek. 34:12. Those who refuse to walk in the light
+will go into darkness. God help people to "flee out of the midst of
+Babylon, and deliver every man his soul."
+
+ 9. And the kings of the earth, who have committed fornication
+ and lived deliciously with her, shall bewail her, and lament for
+ her, when they shall see the smoke of her burning,
+
+ 10. Standing afar off for the fear of her torment, saying, Alas,
+ alas that great city Babylon, that mighty city! for in one hour
+ is thy judgment come.
+
+ 11. And the merchants of the earth shall weep and mourn over
+ her; for no man buyeth their merchandise any more:
+
+ 12. The merchandise of gold, and silver, and precious stones,
+ and of pearls, and fine linen, and purple, and silk, and
+ scarlet, and all thyine wood, and all manner vessels of ivory,
+ and all manner vessels of most precious wood, and of brass, and
+ iron, and marble,
+
+ 13. And cinnamon, and odors, and ointments, and frankincense,
+ and wine, and oil, and fine flour, and wheat, and beasts, and
+ sheep, and horses, and chariots, and slaves, and souls of men.
+
+ 14. And the fruits that thy soul lusted after are departed from
+ thee, and all things which were dainty and goodly are departed
+ from thee, and thou shalt find them no more at all.
+
+ 15. The merchants of these things, which were made rich by her,
+ shall stand afar off for the fear of her torment, weeping and
+ wailing,
+
+ 16. And saying, Alas, alas that great city, that was clothed in
+ fine linen, and purple, and scarlet, and decked with gold, and
+ precious stones, and pearls!
+
+ 17. For in one hour so great riches is come to nought. And every
+ shipmaster, and all the company in ships, and sailors, and as
+ many as trade by sea, stood afar off,
+
+ 18. And cried when they saw the smoke of her burning, saying,
+ What city is like unto this great city!
+
+ 19. And they cast dust on their heads, and cried, weeping and
+ wailing, saying, Alas, alas that great city, wherein were made
+ rich all that had ships in the sea by reason of her costliness!
+ for in one hour is she made desolate.
+
+In this description we have a continuation of the judgments of Babylon
+already introduced. It must be borne in mind, however, that this is the
+spiritual judgments following her moral fall, and not her final and
+everlasting literal destruction. The latter is described under another
+symbol a little further on in this series of prophecy.
+
+The symbol here is that of a great city, the grand metropolis of the
+world, the mart of earth's commerce; a superb city, their [_sic_] being
+no end to its luxuries and magnificence. In it everything that can
+minister to the appetite, gratify the taste, and feed the pride of the
+human soul is to be found in profusion, being described at length. This
+great city is suddenly afire, and her merchants and the great men of the
+world who sustain her are overwhelmed with sorrow at the sight of all
+their wealth disappearing. Thus is great sect Babylon represented. She
+is a mighty city extending not only over the Apocalyptic earth, but, as
+symbolized by the ship-masters, sailors, and foreign traders, over the
+whole world. Suddenly she is set on fire by heaven's truth and her
+spiritual magnificence destroyed. The apostle Paul describes the great
+apostasy as a system that the "Lord shall _consume_ with the spirit of
+his mouth, and shall _destroy_ with the brightness of his coming." 2
+Thes. 2:8. That spiritual consumption is now taking place in accordance
+with the symbols of this chapter, but the entire literal destruction of
+old Babylon will take place coincident "with the brightness of his
+coming," as described in the following chapter.
+
+That sectarians are greatly alarmed over the sad condition of their
+fallen churches is clearly shown by the many quotations already given
+from Protestant writers. They may not be aware that it is a judgment
+from heaven upon man-made organizations; but such we know it to be in
+the light of eternal truth. Not only are they bewailing the loss of
+spiritual life and the desolating famine in sectdom, as was Bishop
+Foster and others, but they are beginning to tremble for their own
+safety and to wonder what the final outcome of it all will be. Wherever
+the gospel truth has been preached in all its purity, the sectarian
+denominations have been left destitute of spiritual life; for the
+children of God have heard his call, "Come out of her, my people," and
+have made their escape to Zion. Hence the ministers of Babylon cry out
+continually, "Stop! you are tearing our churches down," "You are taking
+our best members away from us," etc. But we can not withhold the truth;
+for the time has come when God is gathering his people together out of
+all the "places where they have been scattered in the cloudy and dark
+day" (Ezek. 34:12) into the one church that Jesus built. "Babylon is
+fallen, is fallen."
+
+ 20. Rejoice over her, thou heaven, and ye holy apostles and
+ prophets; for God hath avenged you on her.
+
+This verse is so clear that it requires no special explanation. God's
+people are delivered from sect Babylon; and while the judgments of
+eternal truth are being poured out upon her, all heaven and earth is
+called upon to rejoice and to give glory to God.
+
+ "We stand in the glory that Jesus has given,
+ The moon as the day-spring doth shine;
+ The light of the sun is now equal to seven,
+ So bright is the glory divine.
+
+ "Now filled with the Spirit and clad in the armor
+ Of light and omnipotent truth,
+ We'll testify ever and Jesus we'll honor,
+ And stand from sin Babel aloof.
+
+ "The prophet's keen vision transpiercing the ages,
+ Beheld us to Zion return;
+ We'll sing of our freedom, though Babylon rages,
+ We'll shout as her city doth burn."
+
+ 21. And a mighty angel took up a stone like a great millstone,
+ and cast it into the sea, saying, Thus with violence shall that
+ great city Babylon be thrown down, and shall be found no more at
+ all.
+
+ 22. And the voice of harpers, and musicians, and of pipers, and
+ trumpeters, shall be heard no more at all in thee; and no
+ craftsman, of whatsoever craft he be, shall be found any more in
+ thee; and the sound of a millstone shall be heard no more at all
+ in thee;
+
+ 23. And the light of a candle shall shine no more at all in
+ thee; and the voice of the bridegroom and of the bride shall be
+ heard no more at all in thee: for thy merchants were the great
+ men of the earth; for by thy sorceries were all nations
+ deceived.
+
+ 24. And in her was found the blood of prophets, and of saints,
+ and of all that were slain upon the earth.
+
+Following the moral fall of Babylon and the call of God's people out of
+her, a mighty angel predicts her eternal doom. "With violence shall that
+great city Babylon be thrown down, and _shall be found no more at all_."
+This doubtless has reference to the entire city of Babylon in all her
+divisions brought to view in this series of prophecy and shows her final
+destruction at the coming of Christ, when she shall suddenly be thrown
+with terrific force, like a great millstone descending into the sea, and
+"shall be found no more at all." According to the symbols here given she
+will be like a city completely destroyed, not one inhabitant or living
+creature remaining. Thus her eternal doom is pictured and remains to be
+yet fulfilled.
+
+"And in her was found the blood of prophets, and of saints, and of all
+that were slain upon the earth." We have already shown that
+Protestantism, as well as her mother Romanism, has been guilty of
+shedding innocent blood; and as the term Babylon includes both these
+divisions, when the great city is thrown down with violence, Romanism
+and Protestantism will sink together, and then this awful treasure--the
+blood of prophets and of saints--shall be brought to light in that last
+great day of God Almighty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+
+ And after these things I heard a great voice of much people in
+ heaven, saying, Alleluia; Salvation, and glory, and honor, and
+ power, unto the Lord our God:
+
+ 2. For true and righteous are his judgments: for he hath judged
+ the great whore, which did corrupt the earth with her
+ fornication, and hath avenged the blood of his servants at her
+ hand.
+
+ 3. And again they said, Alleluia. And her smoke rose up for ever
+ and ever.
+
+ 4. And the four and twenty elders and the four beasts fell down
+ and worshipped God that sat on the throne, saying, Amen;
+ Alleluia.
+
+ 5. And a voice came out of the throne, saying, Praise our God,
+ all ye his servants, and ye that fear him, both small and great.
+
+ 6. And I heard as it were the voice of a great multitude, and as
+ the voice of many waters, and as the voice of mighty
+ thunderings, saying, Alleluia: for the Lord God omnipotent
+ reigneth.
+
+ 7. Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honor to him: for the
+ marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife hath made herself
+ ready.
+
+ 8. And to her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine
+ linen, clean and white: for the fine linen is the righteousness
+ of saints.
+
+ 9. And he saith unto me, Write, Blessed are they which are
+ called unto the marriage supper of the Lamb. And he saith unto
+ me, These are the true sayings of God.
+
+ 10. And I fell at his feet to worship him. And he said unto me,
+ See thou do it not: I am thy fellowservant, and of thy brethren
+ that have the testimony of Jesus: worship God: for the testimony
+ of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy.
+
+The scene of this vision is laid in heaven. John heard a great voice of
+much people saying, "Alleluia; Salvation, and glory, and honor, and
+power, unto the Lord our God." This great song of praise doubtless came
+from the lips of the angelic throng; for immediately the four living
+creatures and the four and twenty elders reechoed the same shout of
+praise, saying, "Amen; Alleluia." Then came a voice from the throne
+calling upon the servants of God, both small and great, to unite on this
+occasion in one grand and sacred song of praise; and this sublime chorus
+fell upon the ear of the enraptured apostle "as it were the voice of a
+great multitude, and as the voice of many waters, and as the voice of
+mighty thunderings, saying, Alleluia: for the Lord God omnipotent
+reigneth. Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honor to him for the
+marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife [or bride] hath made herself
+ready." Was not here a hearty response to that call, "Rejoice over her
+thou heaven"? While this scene shows the interest all heaven takes in
+these wondrous scenes of earth, it is doubtless intended especially to
+represent the joy and thanksgiving of God's people who have "gotten the
+victory over the beast, and over his image, and over his mark, and over
+the number of his name."
+
+The marriage of the Lamb which was about to take place was a special
+theme of joy on this occasion. In the Scripture the term _marriage_ is
+frequently used to represent a special union between Christ and his
+people. Thus, the early church was represented as being free because of
+the death of the law, that they "should be _married_ to another, even to
+him who is raised from the dead." Rom. 7:4. So, also, the eternal union
+of Christ with his people is here described under the figure of
+marriage. In one sense they have been married to Christ all through this
+dispensation; in another sense they have not. The church has had the
+promise of this eternal union, hence she has been betrothed to Christ;
+but left in the world, she has been driven into the wilderness, while a
+corrupt and drunken prostitute and her harlot daughters have been in the
+public view. Now, however, the judgments of God have descended upon
+Babylon, and the bride of Christ appears in all her beauty again,
+"arrayed in fine linen, clean and white"; and the next great event is
+her public marriage to Christ when he comes to claim her as his own.
+
+The marriage scene is one of the most joyful that we witness on earth,
+and among Eastern nations especially was celebrated with great pomp and
+magnificence, the joy and splendor of the occasion being enhanced
+according to the rank and wealth of the parties. But earth has never
+witnessed such an event as this special _marriage of the Lamb_. Well may
+the inhabitants of heaven and earth, in view of this sublime spectacle,
+swell the song of praise--"Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honor to
+him: for the marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife hath made
+herself ready." The special preparations that the bride is making
+represents the glorious holiness reformation that is now sweeping over
+the world, gathering God's people together for the splendid event.
+"Blessed are they which are called unto the marriage supper of the
+Lamb."
+
+"These are the true sayings of God." They are almost too glorious to be
+believed; still, they are no idle dreams of fancy: they are true, yea
+"the true sayings of God." In the contemplation of such a wonderful
+event, the beloved apostle was carried away, as it were, with holy
+enthusiasm, and he fell at the feet of the angel to worship. We do not
+know just what the motives or impressions were that caused him to do
+this. But his soul was full, full to overflowing, and he could not but
+adore and worship. The angel, however, refused the homage thus offered,
+by the declaration that he himself, also, was the servant of Christ and
+one of the brethren that had the testimony of Jesus; "for the testimony
+of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy." The idea is: "I am a fellowservant
+with you, and we both have his testimony. You bear witness to him now in
+this present generation; I bear witness to those who are to come. You
+witness now of his death and resurrection; I tell of his future glory
+and triumphs. We are both, therefore, engaged in the same good work. The
+testimony of Jesus and the spirit of prophecy are the same. To God,
+therefore, we must both bow." See remarks on chap. 1:1.
+
+ 11. And I saw heaven opened, and behold a white horse; and he
+ that sat upon him was called Faithful and True, and in
+ righteousness he doth judge and make war.
+
+ 12. His eyes were as a flame _of_ fire, and on his head were
+ many crowns; and he had a name written, that no man knew, but he
+ himself.
+
+ 13. And he was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood: and his
+ name is called The Word of God.
+
+ 14. And the armies which were in heaven followed him upon white
+ horses, clothed in fine linen, white and clean.
+
+ 15. And out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword, that with it he
+ should smite the nations: and he shall rule them with a rod of
+ iron: and he treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath
+ of Almighty God.
+
+ 16. And he hath on his vesture and on his thigh a name written,
+ KING OF KINGS, AND LORD OF LORDS.
+
+That the person described in this vision is Christ is questioned by no
+one. He is the same one who appeared to John in the beginning. Then he
+stood in the midst of the seven golden candle-sticks, the sure defense
+of the churches, holding the seven stars in his right hand. Now,
+however, he appears from the opened heavens on a white horse, his
+mission "to judge and make war." The description of his person, his
+names, and his attributes, unmistakably proclaim him the Son of God. He
+is the "faithful and true," the name by which he made himself known to
+the churches of Philadelphia and Laodicea. "His eyes as a flame of fire"
+denotes omniscience; and as a searcher of all hearts he made himself
+known to the church of Thyatira. "Many crowns" are a symbol of supreme
+sovereignty and doubtless signify his many victories. "And he had a name
+written which no man knew but he himself." He had names by which he
+might be known to mortals; but he had one name that no created
+intelligence could understand: it was known only to him. What that name
+was, of course, is not given; it could not be. If the human mind could
+not conceive it, human language could not convey it. We can know him as
+the Faithful and true Witness, as the Word of God, and as King of kings
+and Lord of lords; but there is one name that we can not know. His
+"vesture dipped in blood" refers, not to the blood of atonement, but to
+the blood of his enemies sprinkled upon his raiment in treading the
+winepress of God's wrath, and denotes that he was going forth to the
+dread work of vengeance. To this I shall refer more fully hereafter. His
+name is also called "the Word of God," which, when used as a personal
+appellation in the Scriptures, always signifies Jesus Christ.
+
+Before considering his mission further and the armies that accompanied
+him, I wish to call special attention to the nature and the chronology
+of this event. If the present series of prophetic symbols (which begin
+with chap. 17) is a narrative of continuous events reaching to the end,
+then the vision before us is a description of the second coming of
+Christ, the event which was just previously announced and for which the
+bride had made herself ready. The usual interpretation given it is, that
+it is a sublime description of the servants of Christ going forth under
+his direction to spread the truth everywhere among the nations--in
+short, that it is the triumph of gospel truth over error under the
+_providential_ government of Christ. That such a meaning can be derived
+from the vision by taking it in a _figurative_ sense there can be no
+doubt, and this is what commentators generally do. They make the whole a
+figurative description of the triumph of the gospel, Christ being
+present only by his superintending providence. It is made simply a
+highly poetic description of the victory of truth and righteousness. In
+this case, however, the principles of symbolic language are clearly
+abandoned and a mere ordinary figurative meaning given. If we follow
+strictly the laws of symbolic language, as we manifestly ought, we shall
+be compelled to take another view of it.
+
+In the first place, if this does not describe the actual coming of
+Christ, then his second coming is nowhere described in the Revelation.
+That so great an event should merely be alluded to in a few places and
+nowhere symbolically described seems incredible. At the judgment scene
+brought to view in the following chapter the presence of Christ is
+_assumed_, but it is not stated. Again, there are no victories of love
+and mercy described at all in the vision before us; but, on the
+contrary, it is a scene of fearful judgment--a terrible treading of "the
+winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God," the complete
+overthrow of every opposing power; while the beast and the false prophet
+are represented as taken and cast alive into a lake of fire burning with
+brimstone. Surely, this is not the work of the church of God. But let it
+be remembered especially that this last event takes place under the
+_seventh_ plague, which is the "filling up" of the wrath of God, and
+that Christ previously announced under the sixth vial, "Behold, _I come_
+as a thief." Christ comes in reality when this seventh plague occurs. To
+represent the glorious triumphs of Christianity by the mission of the
+church, the gospel and the Holy Spirit, under the symbol of Christ,
+going forth to judge, to make war, and to tread the winepress of God's
+wrath, is at war with every principle of symbolic language.
+
+But can this vision of Christ upon a white horse denote a mere
+providential superintendence, such as Christ constantly exercises over
+the church and its spiritual affairs on earth? Certainly not by any
+principle of symbolic language. Throughout the whole prophecy thus far
+we have seen that whenever any symbolic agent is brought upon the
+panorama, whether horseman, or beasts, or locusts, or harlot, or
+whatever else, it always denotes some corresponding agents appearing on
+earth and beginning their appropriate work. The symbolic agent is real.
+But here is a symbolic appearance of Christ. By what law could such a
+symbolic appearance represent merely a providential superintendence? And
+if his appearance was necessary in this case, why was it not necessary
+in every event, to show that it was done under his direction? Again, if
+this symbolic appearance of Christ is not his real appearance, how can
+we tell that there is any reality in the appearance of the horsemen of
+the first four seals, the ten-horned beast, or the harlot woman? What
+right have we to remove one agent from the panorama as an actual agent
+there any more than another? And if this is not his real appearance,
+upon what principle of interpretation can we ever establish the fact of
+his second coming? It is evident to all that, if we can turn this agent
+into a mere providential one, we can do the same with another, and thus
+set aside his second coming altogether. Then, what shall we say in the
+next chapter when some one steals our weapons and declares that the
+great white throne before which all the dead, small and great, stand is
+nothing but that providential government of God under which all sinners
+pass condemnation upon themselves and their sins find them out? If we
+can deal thus with symbols, we can do anything with them and can make
+out any meaning we please.
+
+The laws of symbolic language require us to take the appearance of
+Christ in this vision just as we do the appearance of any other agent,
+as a real event. We can not consistently give it any other meaning. His
+_symbolic_ appearance must represent his _real_ appearance; otherwise,
+it can never be represented by anything. Jesus appears in his own name
+and person because there is no other that can represent his infinite
+dignity and majesty. And the symbols connected with him denote the
+object of his mission and the work which he performs. His white horse
+shows him now a glorious conqueror; his crowns denote his supreme
+dominion; the sword of his mouth and his vesture dipped in blood denote
+the dread work of vengeance upon his enemies; while the army following
+him doubtless denotes the "ten thousands of his saints" that accompany
+him when he comes. Jude 14. The bride has already prepared herself for
+his coming, and now the eternal union takes place. "Blessed are they
+which are called unto the marriage supper of the Lamb."
+
+ 17. And I saw an angel standing in the sun; and he cried with a
+ loud voice, saying to all the fowls that fly in the midst of
+ heaven, Come and gather yourselves together unto the supper of
+ the great God;
+
+ 18. That ye may eat the flesh of kings, and the flesh of
+ captains, and the flesh of mighty men, and the flesh of horses;
+ and of them that sit on them, and the flesh of all men, both
+ free and bond, both small and great.
+
+ 19. And I saw the beast, and the kings of the earth, and their
+ armies, gathered together to make war against him that sat on
+ the horse, and against his army.
+
+ 20. And the beast was taken, and with him the false prophet that
+ wrought miracles before him, with which he deceived them that
+ had received the mark of the beast, and them that worshipped his
+ image. These both were cast alive into a lake of fire burning
+ with brimstone.
+
+ 21. And the remnant were slain with the sword of him that sat
+ upon the horse, which sword proceeded out of his mouth: and all
+ the fowls were filled with their flesh.
+
+The foregoing explanation so nearly covers this ground that little
+remains to be said. The symbol is that of vast slaughter on a
+battle-field, which gathers all the birds of heaven and the beasts of
+the forest to the prey. The enemies gathered for this battle were "the
+beast, and the kings of the earth, and their armies," together with the
+false prophet. This is the grand confederacy of wickedness formed under
+the mission of the three unclean spirits that went forth, not only unto
+the kings of the earth, but also into the whole world. This is not a
+literal collecting of armies, hence not a literal slaughter upon a
+battlefield, nor a literal assembling of carrion birds; but it is a
+symbolic representation of the final and eternal destruction of the
+allied powers of sin. As will be further described in the following
+chapter, they were gathered together for the purpose of overthrowing the
+church of God and anticipated a complete victory in the battle of
+Armageddon; but the sudden appearance of Jesus Christ to rescue his
+bride results in their complete overthrow. The special theme of this
+series of prophecy has been the history of apostate Christendom; hence
+the beast and the false prophet are represented as being taken and
+thrown into the lake of fire burning with brimstone. "The remnant" that
+were slain refers to the other powers of wickedness not embraced in
+Catholicism and Protestantism This series being now traced to its close,
+the narrative returns to take up another important theme of prophetic
+truth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+
+ And I saw an angel come down from heaven, having the key of the
+ bottomless pit and a great chain in his hand.
+
+ 2. And he laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is
+ the Devil, and Satan, and bound him a thousand years.
+
+ 3. And cast him into the bottomless pit, and shut him up, and
+ set a seal upon him, that he should deceive the nations no more,
+ till the thousand years should be fulfilled: and after that he
+ must be loosed a little season.
+
+It is commonly supposed that the events here described are to occur at
+the second advent; but by considering carefully the different things
+enumerated in this chapter--the binding of the dragon; then a thousand
+years; after that the Armageddon battle; and last of all the judgment
+scene, in which all the dead, both small and great, are rewarded, and
+all the powers of wickedness cast into the lake of fire--it will be seen
+at once that this is not a continuation of the series of prophecy
+immediately preceding, but an entirely new theme, running partly
+parallel with that series, and both ending at the same point--the second
+coming of Christ and the general judgment, in which the lake of fire is
+the final doom of the combined powers of wickedness. In that series the
+beast and the false prophet--Romanism and Protestantism--were the chief
+powers of evil under consideration; in this series the dragon feature
+predominates. If this be not true, then there will be two judgment
+scenes and the wicked cast into the lake of fire twice. Positive proof
+of the position here taken will be given as we proceed.
+
+The power here referred to as "the Devil and Satan" is also denominated
+"the dragon." This use of the definite article shows clearly that a
+particular character is designated--_the_ dragon--and implies that the
+object has already been introduced. In his first appearance upon the
+symbolic panorama (chap. 12:3) he is simply styled _a_ dragon, but in
+every subsequent instance he is called _the_ dragon, which proves that
+the same character is meant. In addition to the former remarks on
+chapter 12:9 relative to the terms applied to this antichristian power,
+the following quotation from the People's Cyclopaedia will throw some
+light on the subject: "In the mythical history and legendary poetry of
+almost every nation, the dragon appears as the emblem of the destructive
+and anarchistic principle.... Like the serpent, the dragon is always a
+minister of evil ... the object of which is to fight order, harmony, and
+progress. In Christian art, the dragon is the emblem of sin.... It is
+often represented as crushed under the feet of saints and martyrs....
+Sometimes its prostrate attitude signifies the triumph of Christianity
+over Paganism." Art. Dragon. Considering this usage of these terms for
+ages, it is not strange that they were applied also to that great
+antichristian, persecuting system of Paganism, which stood before
+Christianity as its greatest barrier to "order, harmony, and progress."
+
+The angel that overthrew this public system of Pagan infidelity
+symbolizes the primitive host of Christians, the ministers in
+particular. Some have supposed that he represented Christ; but, as
+already shown conclusively, Christ can not be symbolized by an inferior
+intelligence, hence always appears upon the scene in his own character,
+proclaiming his own eternal name. The fact that this angel possessed the
+key of the bottomless pit is no proof that he is Christ, even though in
+chapter 1:18 Jesus is said to have certain keys; for in chapter 9:1 we
+find that a _fallen star_--the symbol of Mohammed--is said to have "the
+key of the bottomless pit" also. At the most, this expression is only a
+symbol of power and authority, be it good or bad. In the gospel the same
+figure is applied to God's ministers, where they are given authority to
+bind the powers of wickedness on earth. Mat. 16:19; 18:18. The chain is
+a symbol of the power to bind.
+
+When Christianity first commenced its warfare with this huge system of
+error, almost the entire then-known world was under its deceptive
+influence; but by a long conflict, in which thousands of the noble
+followers of the Lamb were slaughtered, this antichristian public system
+of Pagan infidelity was at last completely overthrown, and the final
+result was, that the civilized world became as completely Christian
+(nominally at least) as it ever had been Pagan. This great
+transformation could never have been effected without the undying
+heroism and whole-hearted consecration of the first disciples of Christ.
+From this time the dragon _as such_--as a public deceiver of the nations
+throughout the Apocalyptic earth--was overthrown. This marks the
+beginning of the thousand years mentioned.
+
+Since many of the principles of heathenism were copied by the church of
+Rome, it may be difficult for some to understand at first why it is said
+that the dragon no longer deceived the nations after being cast down by
+primitive Christianity; but this becomes clear when we consider what the
+dragon really was and what the church of Rome was understood to be. A
+time came when the entire civilized world knew that heathenism as such
+was wrong and rejected the very idea of a plurality of gods; but they
+were led to believe that they could adapt many of their former rites and
+ceremonies to the worship of the one true God in whom they believed and
+thereby render acceptable service to him, and were sure that the Romish
+church was the one true apostolic church. It was not the dragon, or
+heathenism, that then deceived them; it was Christianity--_a false
+Christianity_. The manner in which the people were deceived during the
+time following the casting down of heathenism in the beginning has
+already been considered in chapters XII, XIII, XVII, XVIII, etc.,
+covering the same period of time included in the one thousand years in
+the vision before us.
+
+We can not apply this period specified as literally one thousand years
+without varying from every principle of time prophecy in the Revelation,
+for they are all symbolic; neither can we apply it according to the
+usual year-day method, which, signifying three hundred and sixty
+thousand years, would throw this series of events out of harmony with
+the time-periods allotted to the other themes of truth running over the
+same ground and terminating at the same point--the general judgment.
+Therefore, to be consistent, we shall have to apply it as (so far as
+human knowledge of the exact dates is concerned) an indefinite length of
+time, on the same principle that "the hour of temptation" in chapter
+3:10, the three and one-half days in chapter 11:9, and the "hour" in
+which the ten kingdoms receive power with the beast (chap. 17:12), etc.,
+are applied.
+
+ 4. And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them, and judgment was
+ given unto them: and I saw the souls of them that were beheaded
+ for the witness of Jesus, and for the word of God, and which had
+ not worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither had
+ received his mark upon their foreheads, or in their hands; and
+ they lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years.
+
+ 5. But the rest of the dead lived not again until the thousand
+ years were finished. This is the first resurrection.
+
+ 6. Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first
+ resurrection: on such the second death hath no power, but they
+ shall be priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with him
+ a thousand years.
+
+We have in this description another division of the subject
+introduced--a history of God's people, or one phase of the church,
+during the same thousand years following the casting down of the dragon.
+"They lived and reigned with Christ." It was those who had "part in the
+first resurrection" that were exalted to this honored position with
+Christ. Millenarians always _assume_ that this refers to a literal
+resurrection at the second coming of Christ, but no such thing is hinted
+at. Not one word is said about literally resurrected saints reigning.
+John says, "I saw the _souls_ of them which were beheaded for the
+witness of Jesus ... and _they_ lived and reigned with Christ a thousand
+years." Nothing whatever is said about any reign on earth at all; but
+the description shows plainly that it was disembodied spirits that were
+reigning with Christ in Paradise during the period that followed the
+casting down of the dragon, which was in reality one of long apostasy
+and darkness on earth. Before and during this conflict with Paganism the
+church of God was publicly triumphant on earth. Afterward, during the
+apostasy, a false church was, in the public view, triumphant, while the
+church of God was crowded out of sight into the wilderness. However, the
+reign of God's saints did not cease; for when they were slaughtered by
+their relentless persecutors and deprived of their reign on earth, they
+were, as symbolized by the man-child, caught up to God and to his throne
+and there "lived and reigned with Christ" during the thousand years
+under consideration.
+
+This same thought concerning the reign of the martyrs in Paradise while
+the powers of evil triumphed on earth, was brought to view on the
+opening of the fifth seal in chapter 6:9-11. "And when he had opened the
+fifth seal, I saw under the altar the _souls of them that were slain_
+for the word of God, and for the testimony which they held: and they
+cried with a loud voice, saying, How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost
+thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth? And
+white robes were given unto every one of them; and it was said unto
+them, that they should rest yet for a little season, until their
+fellowservants also and their brethren, _that should be killed as they
+were_ should be fulfilled." This quotation will make clear one point
+concerning the refusal of the martyrs to worship the beast and his
+image. We are not to understand that every soul of the martyrs John saw
+in these visions reigned during the entire period under consideration;
+but he beheld the reign of the saints above during the one thousand
+years, and he saw there the souls of all the martyrs--such as had been
+slain in the early days of Christianity (chap. 12:11); such as refused
+to worship the beast and were martyred therefor (chap. 13:7); and also,
+such as "should be killed as they were" (chap. 6:11) and were put to
+death shortly after the formation of the image of the beast. Chap.
+13:15; 16:6.
+
+This company of souls that the apostle saw reigning with Christ above
+were those who had had part "in the first resurrection," which had made
+them "blessed and holy." They were not on earth; they were disembodied
+spirits above, hence had not been literally resurrected. The Scriptures
+clearly teach that mankind in their ordinary condition are "_dead_ in
+trespasses and in sins," and that through salvation, which makes them
+"blessed and holy," they are "quickened" to a new life in Christ. Eph.
+2:1. That this is Scripturally "the first resurrection" is proved most
+positively by the words of Christ--"Verily, verily, I say unto you, the
+hour is coming, _and now is_, when the _dead_ shall hear the voice of
+the Son of God: and they that hear _shall live_. He that heareth my
+word, and believeth on him that sent me, _hath_ everlasting life, and
+shall not come into condemnation, but is _passed from death unto life_."
+John 5:25, 24. Although many other proofs could easily be given, this of
+itself is sufficient to establish the point that the host of early
+Christians who had "passed from death unto life" in Christ and who gave
+their lives gladly for the sake of Christ, constituted the ones referred
+to as having had "part in the first resurrection." According to verse 6
+it was only on those who had part in the first resurrection that the
+second death had no power. The church at Smyrna received the sure
+promise from Christ himself that they should "not be hurt of the second
+death" (chap. 2:11); and this shows beyond all question that even at
+that early date they had had part in this first resurrection that makes
+men blessed and holy.
+
+It is the trick of Beelzebub to deceive souls by causing them to
+overlook the fact that this first resurrection that made men blessed and
+holy is of a spiritual nature and to fix their hopes in two literal
+resurrections at the end. There will be but one literal resurrection
+then, as is clearly shown by the account given of the judgment in this
+chapter, verses 11-15. The writer of the Revelation declared positively,
+"Behold, he cometh with clouds: and _every eye_ shall see him, and they
+also which pierced him: and all kindreds of the earth shall wail because
+of him." Chap. 1:7. If this does not prove that there is but one literal
+resurrection when Christ comes, then I would not know how to state such
+a fact if I desired. Furthermore, Jesus himself, in the same chapter in
+which he described "the first resurrection," says most positively that
+all the literal dead shall be resurrected at the same time. "Marvel not
+at this," he says: "the _hour_ is coming, in the which all that are in
+the graves shall hear his voice, and shall come forth; they that have
+done good, unto the resurrection of life; and they that have done evil,
+unto the resurrection of damnation." John 5:28, 29. This _hour_
+certainly can not signify more than a short period of time. In their
+efforts to prove two literal resurrections, millenarians always quote
+with emphasis, "The dead in Christ shall rise first." 1 Thes. 4:16. In
+doing so they, either ignorantly or wilfully, wrest the Scriptures to
+their own destruction; for any one can see at a glance that no such
+thing as two resurrections is even hinted at. Verses 15-17 simply teach
+this, that the righteous who are living on the earth at the time Christ
+appears will not ascend to heaven _before_ the righteous dead are
+resurrected, but the dead will rise first, then they will all be caught
+up together at one and the same time. The wicked are not mentioned in
+this connection; for, as stated, Paul was writing this only for the
+comfort and the edification of the church. In the following chapter,
+however, their "sudden destruction" at the second coming of Christ is
+mentioned as a warning to the church.
+
+It is evident that the first resurrection as applied in this connection
+specified particularly that phase of the church which, as symbolized by
+the man-child, was caught up to God through martyrdom and there "lived
+and reigned with Christ." The other phase of the church, symbolized by
+the woman, is not said to reign with Christ a thousand years, but, on
+the other hand, is represented as driven into the wilderness, her public
+reign on earth being ended by the holy city being trodden under foot of
+a profane multitude of apostate beast-worshipers; and the two witnesses,
+clothed in sackcloth, were prophesying only in a few isolated,
+individual hearts.
+
+A careful study of this scripture, taken in connection with others in
+the Revelation applying to the same object, will show that all God's
+people, both those here brought to view during the thousand years and
+those following that period, are spoken of as dead people resurrected
+and reigning. They are considered under two phases--those who, as
+symbolized by the man-child, were caught up to God through martyrdom and
+there lived and reigned with Christ; and those who, as symbolized by the
+woman, were deprived of their public reign on earth and were driven into
+the wilderness during the same period. The first phase were "priests of
+God and of Christ" and reigned with him in Paradise (chap. 6:9-11); but
+"the rest," the phase symbolized by the woman, did not live and enjoy
+their public reign again, as in the early days of Christianity, until
+the expiration of the thousand-year period. It is true that individuals
+on earth received life from God and were thus spiritually resurrected
+during the thousand-year period; but the dominant beast-power martyred
+them by thousands, the two witnesses were then in their sack-cloth
+state, and thus the public triumphal reign of the saints on earth
+ceased. The statement of verse five that "the rest of the dead lived not
+again until the thousand years were finished" should be applied not in
+an individual, but in a general sense, the same as the reign above
+during the same period is considered. There is also some doubt as to the
+authenticity of this sentence. It is not found in the Vatican
+Manuscript, which is one of the oldest in existence; and the Syriac
+Version, which has come down to us from early days through an entirely
+separate channel, does not contain it. However, it is evident that the
+phase of the church symbolized by the woman actually reigns triumphantly
+on earth after the thousand years is finished; for verses 7-9 of this
+chapter show that the dragon, combined with Gog and Magog, goes forth on
+the breadth of the earth to compass the camp of the saints just before
+the end of time.
+
+The fact that the reign of God's people on earth is divided into two
+distinct periods is shown also by other prophecies. In the seventh
+chapter of Daniel is recorded a vision of four great beasts, symbolizing
+the Babylonian, Medo-Persian, Grecian, and Roman empires. Verse 18,
+connected with Dan. 2:31-44, shows that the saints were to possess the
+kingdom of God before the overthrow of all these four kingdoms, which
+was actually fulfilled by Jesus Christ appearing during the reign of the
+Roman empire and planting the kingdom of God in the earth. See Mark
+1:15; Luke 12:32; 16:16; Col. 1:13. Then follows a description of the
+rise of the Papacy, which was to "_wear out the saints of the most
+High_" for a time, times, and the dividing of times--three and one-half
+times, or forty-two months, or, prophetically, twelve hundred and sixty
+years. This, as before explained, reaches to the year A.D. 1530. During
+this period the public reign of the saints on earth ceased. Then
+immediately following it is said, "The judgment shall sit, and they
+shall take away his dominion, to consume and to destroy it _unto the
+end_." This does not refer to the final judgment; it is a spiritual
+judgment that commences before that time and continues "_unto the end_."
+For example of a similar _judgment_ see Acts 7:7.
+
+God had a people during the Protestant era who walked in all the light
+they possessed and who were filled with judgment against the beast-power
+that had worn out the saints for ages. And though in places some were
+put to death for refusing to worship the image of the beast that
+lifeless professors had set up, yet there were from time to time
+reformations that resurrected many people to life in Christ. A little
+later, however, the real spiritual reign of the saints is perfectly
+restored in the pure gospel light of the evening time, and now the next
+verse is fulfilled, which says, "And the kingdom and dominion, and the
+greatness of the kingdom under the whole heaven, shall be given to the
+people of the saints of the most High, whose kingdom is an everlasting
+kingdom." It is only reasonable to suppose that the public reign on
+earth would commence gradually and would finally reach its perfect
+fulfilment, just the same as it ceased gradually in the beginning.
+Therefore we can not point to a definite date exactly marking the end of
+the thousand years, any more than we can locate exactly the time of its
+commencement; but we must be satisfied just to consider this symbolic
+expression as covering a long period of time during which these
+important phases of deep truth are considered merely from a general
+standpoint.
+
+This special reign of a thousand years above is doubtless brought to our
+view for the express purpose of making the history of the triumph of
+Christianity continuous. When interrupted on earth, the scene is
+suddenly transferred to Paradise; then when the woman comes out of the
+wilderness and the public reign on earth begins again, while the woman
+is being prepared as a bride for the coming of the Lamb, the scene, as
+the following description in verse 9 also will show, is again
+transferred to earth. The reign above does not in reality cease with the
+expiration of the thousand years, but we are permitted to obtain a view
+of it only for that length of time during the down-trodden state of the
+church on earth. This reign of the martyrs' above is placed in direct
+contrast with the public reign on earth during the same time, which
+consisted of multitudes of people worshiping the beast, recieving his
+image and his mark. What the "thrones" on which they sat and the
+"judgment" given them signifies, I do not know for certain, but it is
+doubtless the same exalted privilege and authority which Christ promised
+to all his over-comers--to sit with him on his throne. Chap. 3:21.
+
+ 7. And when the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be
+ loosed out of his prison,
+
+ 8. And shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four
+ quarters of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them together to
+ battle: the number of whom is as the sand of the sea.
+
+ 9. And they went up on the breadth of the earth, and compassed
+ the camp of the saints about, and the beloved city: and fire
+ came down from God out of heaven, and devoured them.
+
+ 10. And the devil that deceived them was cast into the lake of
+ fire and brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet are,
+ and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever.
+
+The loosing of Satan, or the dragon, is the first important point to be
+considered. Before this matter can be rightly understood, however, we
+must take into account carefully certain facts regarding his binding. It
+was not the dragon as a political power that Christianity attacked (it
+did not labor to that end), but it was its huge public system of false
+belief that was overthrown. This great system, as opposed to
+Christianity, can all be summed up under the one word _infidelity_.
+_Infidel_ signifies "a heathen; one who disbelieves in Christ, or the
+divine origin and authority of Christianity."--Webster. This system was
+positively an antichristian power that sought by every possible means to
+destroy the religion of Jesus and to blot out his very name. It failed
+in the attempt. It was bound. During the long reign of Popery, when the
+doctrine was be-a-Catholic-or-die, infidelity could not publicly lift
+its head in the sense in which it was cast down by the early Christians.
+It had no power over the nations of the Apocalyptic earth to then
+deceive them; but they were greatly deceived by a false Christianity
+until almost all the world wondered after the beast. The release of the
+dragon, then, in order to be entirely satisfactory and consistent, must
+embrace the following points: First, it must at least include the
+development of a great public antichristian power whose avowed object is
+to destroy the whole fabric of Christianity. Second, being bound by
+divine power, his release must be the result of divine permission for a
+special purpose. Third, the scene of his imprisonment must necessarily
+be the place of his release; namely, the earth--the Apocalyptic
+earth--the territory of the Roman empire.
+
+We find all these requirements meeting a most perfect fulfilment in the
+events described under the pouring out of the first vial, which was done
+by the direction of Him that sat upon the throne. A sufficient history
+of that fearful system of infidelity which, through the labors of
+Voltaire and his coadjutors, spread throughout all Europe has already
+been given. The very object of the leaders of this movement was the
+extermination of the Christian religion, and their secret watchword was
+"Crush the wretch," meaning Jesus Christ. The dragon was loose in all
+his terrible features. The Pagans upheld a false belief; these modern
+worshipers of the dragon did likewise and publicly exalted the "Goddess
+of Reason" as an object of devotion, setting aside every tenth day for
+their hellish orgies in her honor. The former endeavored to overthrow
+the Christian religion; the latter had for its special aim the utter
+destruction of everything Christian either in name or in character. This
+devilish system spread over all Europe and almost undermined the whole
+fabric of society, and threatened to convert the world from Christianity
+to the worship of the Goddess of Reason. Its foothold gained was so
+extensive and its effects so far-reaching that prominent historians,
+D'Aubigne among the number, have denominated the period of its greatest
+triumph "the day of Reason." It is one of the three and one-half days
+covered by the prophecy in Rev. 11:9.
+
+I do not wish to be understood, however, as limiting the release of the
+dragon and his work to the system of infidelity that had its origin in
+France. I merely refer to that unfortunate system as the beginning of
+the dragon's release and work--the re-introduction to the world of those
+principles of public hostility to Christianity which had lain buried
+since the days of Pagan Rome. The dragon in the beginning was a
+deceptive system, one that "deceived the whole world"; but its
+deceptions were uncovered by the light of Christianity, and then it
+became the bitter public opposer of the religion of Christ. In the
+release of the dragon the order is reversed. He first appears as the
+public enemy of Christianity in the form already mentioned, but
+afterwards changes his tactics to milder methods in order the better to
+"deceive" the people, as we shall see hereafter.
+
+But there is another chapter in the history of the dragon's career that
+we must not overlook--his partnership with Gog and Magog. The original
+signification of the terms _Gog and Magog_ is difficult to ascertain, as
+all known accounts are conflicting. The terms occur in Ezek. 38 and 39
+also. In the Revelation, however, it is clear that these terms are
+applied to Romanism and Protestantism, and under the special leadership
+of this spirit of antichrist they are gathered together to battle
+against the saints of the most High. I will again quote the description
+of this union as given under the sixth vial, which refers to the present
+time: "And I saw three unclean spirits like frogs come out of the mouth
+of the dragon, and out of the mouth of the beast, and out of the mouth
+of the false prophet. For they are the spirits of devils, working
+miracles, which go forth unto the kings of the earth and of the whole
+world, to gather them to the battle of that great day of God
+Almighty.... And he gathered them into a place called in the Hebrew
+tongue Armageddon." Chap. 16:13-16. It will be noticed that the field of
+operations under this grand confederation of the three unclean spirits
+is enlarged so that it includes not merely the Apocalyptic earth, but
+"the whole world."
+
+In order to form a confederation of powers each of which holds its own
+distinctive principles, it is necessary that each make certain
+concessions, in outward appearance at least, so that they can work
+together in harmony against a common foe. In this case it will be
+necessary that three points be conceded before the dragon, the beast,
+and the false prophet can agree. First, the dragon must not appear in
+his true character as antichristian; he must be clothed in some
+different attire in order to "deceive." Second, Catholicism must stop
+her work of slaying those who disagree with her and cover up her true
+principles. Third, Protestantism must cease protesting against the
+abominations of Catholicism. We are living in the time when this
+confederation of the powers of wickedness is being effected; therefore
+we must not expect to see the dragon as a terrible creature with heads
+and horns standing as the open adversary of God, but we must look for
+him dressed up in a garb "to deceive." If necessary he can place himself
+under a Christian garb without violating his conscience--of which he has
+none.
+
+It will perhaps be beneficial to give the reader a short account of some
+of the forms under which the dragon is manifesting himself at the
+present time in order to "deceive" the people. It will be remembered
+that, in the description of the first vial, which represented the awful
+system of infidelity that was spread over Europe, Dr. Adam Weishaupt of
+the University of Ingolstadt, formed a secret society under the name of
+the Illuminati in order the better to spread these wicked principles. A
+quotation was also made showing that "_Freemasonry_ being in high repute
+all over Europe when Weishaupt first formed the plan of his society, he
+availed himself of its secrecy to introduce his new order, which rapidly
+spread, by the efforts of its founders and disciples, through all those
+countries." Now, if Freemasonry was such an excellent channel for the
+dragon to begin his work through, is it not reasonable to suppose that
+he would still retain his position in that order, and especially since
+_the very name of Christ_ is barred from its rites, rules, and
+ceremonies? And this thought is especially convincing when we consider
+the fact that Freemasonry is in its very nature and constitution only a
+form of Paganism. This vast body is founded on what they call the
+"ancient mysteries." The following is taken from Masonic Salvation by
+Fred Husted:
+
+"Warburton says: 'Each of the Pagan gods had (beside the public and
+open) a secret worship paid unto him, to which none were admitted but
+those who had been selected by preparatory ceremonies called initiation.
+This secret worship was called "the mysteries."'
+
+"Mackey, another member of this order, says: 'These mysteries existed in
+every country of heathendom, in each under a different name, and to some
+extent under a different form, but always and everywhere with the same
+design of inculcating (teaching) by allegorical and symbolical teachings
+the great Masonic doctrines of the unity of God and the immortality of
+the soul. This one important proposition and the fact which it
+enumerates (states) must never be lost sight of, in any inquiry into the
+origin of Freemasonry; for the Pagan mysteries were to the spurious
+Freemasonry of antiquity precisely what the Masters' lodges are to the
+Freemasonry of the present day.'
+
+"This is certainly a frank statement, coming as it does from a man who
+is an acknowledged and highly esteemed authority in matters pertaining
+to the craft. Daniel Sickles says, 'In Egypt, Greece, and many other
+ancient nations Freemasonry, that is, the Mysteries, was one of the
+earliest agencies employed to effect the improvement and enlightenment
+of man.' Pierson says, 'The identity of the Masonic institutions with
+the ancient Mysteries is obvious,' which means clearly to be seen,
+manifest to any and all.
+
+"Masons say that the order is founded on the Bible--that is, unlearned
+Masons say so. Geo. Wingate Chase, in the Digest of Masonic Law, says:
+'The Jews, the Turks, each reject either the New Testament or the Old or
+both, and yet we see no good reasons why they should not be made Masons.
+In fact, Blue Lodge [first three degrees] Masonry has nothing whatever
+to do with the Bible. It is not founded on the Bible. If it were, it
+would not be Masonry; it would be something else.'
+
+"Sickles says in speaking of the third, or Master Mason's degree, 'There
+are characters impressed upon it which can not be mistaken. _It is
+thoroughly Egyptian_.' He further says that the tradition is older by a
+thousand years than Solomon. 'That our [Masonic] rites embrace all the
+possible circumstances of man, moral, social, and spiritual, and have a
+meaning high as the heavens, broad as the universe, and profound as
+eternity.' Sickles in Gen. Chiman Rezon.
+
+"The writer was informed when the charges were given him 'that our
+ancient brethren worshiped in high hills and in low vales, and that
+guards were placed to keep off cowans or eves-droppers.' By referring to
+Scripture we at once find the character of those who worshiped in high
+hills and low vales, and why they needed a guard to keep off
+eves-droppers. 'Thou saidst, I will not transgress; when upon every high
+hill and under every green tree thou wanderest, playing the harlot.'
+Jer. 2:20; 3:6. 'Ye shall utterly destroy all the places, wherein the
+nations which ye shall possess served other gods, upon the high
+mountains, and upon the hills, and under every green tree.' Deut. 12:2.
+'Enflaming themselves with idols under every green tree, slaying the
+children in the vales under the clifts of the rocks.... Even thither
+wentest thou up to offer sacrifice.' Isa. 57:5-7. They were not afraid
+of Ahab and Jezebel (2 Kings 7:10; 1 Kings 14:23), and they grew and
+multiplied in their reigns, and in the reigns of all those of whom it is
+recorded that 'they did that which was evil in the sight of the Lord.'
+Some of the kings of Israel and of Judah destroyed their high places for
+them and were highly favored of God for so doing.
+
+"Again, 'The precepts of Jesus could not have been made obligatory upon
+a Jew. A Christian would have denied the sanction of the Koran. A
+Mohammedan must have rejected the law of Moses, and a disciple of
+Zoroaster would have turned from all, to the teaching of his
+Zend-Avesta. The universal law of nature, which the authors of the old
+charges have properly called the moral, is therefore the _only law_
+suited in every respect to be adopted as the Masonic code.' Mackeys'
+Textbook, Masonic Jurisprudence. If the statements just quoted do not
+place the secret society of Masonry on a footing decidedly Pagan, it is
+difficult to say just where it does stand....
+
+"Tammuz, or Osiris of Egypt, who is declared to be the original of Hiram
+Abiff the temple-builder, is still mourned for. Ezek. 8:14. See Young's
+Analytical Concordance or any standard Greek Mythology. Now see
+Piersons' Traditions of Freemasonry. 'The Masonic legend stands by
+itself, unsupported by history, or other than its own traditions. Yet we
+readily recognize in Hiram Abiff the Osiris of the Egyptians, the
+Mithras of the Persians, the Bacchus of the Greeks [god of drunkenness,
+or feasts and the like], the Dionysis of the fraternity of artificers,
+and the Atys of the Phrygians, whose passions, deaths, and resurrections
+were celebrated by these people respectively.' Thus it is clearly shown
+that each of these ancient nations had its counterfeit Savior and
+Redeemer, and it is here proved by the words of Masonic Grand Masters,
+authors, and authorities, that Masonry is of Pagan origin."
+
+When we think of the millions of devotees of this form of Paganism,
+multitudes of church-members and preachers, surely it is not difficult
+to see that the dragon is loose in deceiving power again. That he is
+meeting with great success in forming his confederation of all false
+religions, is obvious. The world's Parliament of Religions, held in
+Chicago in the year 1893, is an illustration of this statement. The
+dragon, the beast, and the false prophet met in "mutual confidence and
+respect," a "brotherhood" of religions. Theism, Judaism, Mohammedanism,
+Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, Shintoism, Zoroastrianism,
+Catholicism, the Greek Church, and Protestantism in many forms--all
+these were represented. And the devotees of these religions met, as they
+said, "To unite all religion against all irreligion; to make the golden
+rule the basis of this union; and to present to the world _substantial
+unity of many religions_." The following are a few extracts from
+addresses made before the Parliament.
+
+President Charles Carroll Bonney, in the opening address, said:
+"Worshipers of God and lovers of man: Let us rejoice that we have lived
+to see this glorious day.... That we are permitted to take part in this
+solemn and majestic event of a World's Congress of Religions. The
+importance of this event can not be overestimated. Its influence on the
+future relations of the various races of men, can not be too highly
+esteemed. If this Congress shall faithfully execute its duties with
+which it has been charged, it shall become the joy of the whole earth,
+and stand in human history like a _new Mount Zion_, crowned with glory,
+and marking the actual beginning of a _new epoch of brotherhood_ and
+peace. _For when the religious faiths of the world recognize each other
+as brothers, children of one Father_, whom all profess to love and
+serve, then, and not until then, will the nations of the earth yield to
+the spirit of concord and learn war no more.... We meet on the mountain
+height of absolute respect for the religious convictions of each
+other.... This day the sun of a new era of religious peace and progress
+arises over the world, dispelling the dark clouds of sectarian strife.
+_It is the brotherhood of religions._"
+
+Chairman John Henry Barrows, in his address, said: "We are here not as
+Baptists and Buddhists, Catholics and Confucians, Parsees and
+Presbyterians, Methodists and Moslems; we are here as members of a
+Parliament of Religions, over which flies no sectarian flag, ... but
+where for the first time in large council is lifted up the banner of
+love, fellowship, brotherhood.... Welcome, one and all, thrice welcome
+to the world's first Parliament of Religions! Welcome to the men and
+women of Israel, the standing miracle of nations and religions! Welcome
+to the disciples of Prince Siddartha, the many millions who worship
+their lord Buddha as the light of Asia! Welcome to the high-priests of
+the national religion of Japan! This city has every reason to be
+grateful to the enlightened ruler of 'the sunrise kingdom.' Welcome to
+the men of India, and all faiths! Welcome to all the disciples of
+Christ! ... It seems to me that the spirits of just and good men hover
+over this assembly. I believe the spirit of Paul is here. I believe the
+spirit of the wise and humane Buddha is here, and of Socrates the
+searcher after truth.... When a few days ago I met for the first time
+the delegates who have come to us from Japan, and shortly after the
+delegates who have come to us from India, I felt that the arms of human
+brotherhood had reached almost around the globe." World's Parliament of
+Religions, Chap. III. Similar congresses have since been held. While I
+never expect to see all these principles of evil under one organized
+form, yet it is evident that the spirits of devils that have gone forth
+into "all the world" are uniting them all under one _spirit_--that of
+Antichrist.
+
+Another form in which the old dragon is manifesting himself and uniting
+thousands of people against the truth, and one in which the "miracles"
+ascribed to this latest confederation of Satan are performed, is that of
+"Christian Science." Attracted by its healing doctrine, multitudes are
+lured into this deceptive communion of Mrs. Eddy's. At the very best her
+system is, as every historian knows, only a slight revision of the
+Oriental Philosophy; and notwithstanding its forged name _Christian_, it
+is truly subversive of the doctrine of Christ. Her grand central
+doctrine of the "allness" of mind and the unreality of matter is a true
+copy of the "fantastic idealism" of the Gnostics. Gnosticism was based
+on "speculative knowledge." So is Mrs. Eddy's theory. Gnosticism denied
+the "_true humanity_ of the Redeemer, and made his person a mere
+phantom, and his work a mere illusion." So does Christian Science.
+Although Mrs. Eddy clamours loudly that her work is _Christian_ and her
+multitude of followers believe her claim, still a careful study of her
+work Science and Health will convince any unprejudiced person that she
+utterly repudiates the atonement-work of Jesus Christ by denying his
+person and the reality of sin and matter. Though the system may contain
+some good moral principles, yet it has no power to save men from sin,
+since it denies the existence of actual sin. Her denial of the one
+personal God--"all is infinite mind, and its infinite manifestations,"--
+is but a swing of the pendulum from the godless and graceless system of
+the materialistic philosophy propounded by Darwin and Haeckel and is as
+absurd and unscriptural (although opposite) as the rankest Pantheism.
+
+The salvation of the soul through faith in Jesus Christ has absolutely
+no place in the Christian Science creed. It is nothing but a species of
+universalism. Individuals of every evil class and character--
+self-lovers, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to
+parents, unthankful, unholy, without natural affection, trucebreakers,
+false accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good,
+traitors, heady, highminded, lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God,
+profane, murderers of fathers and mothers, man-slayers, whoremongers,
+liars, drunkards, sorcerers, perjured persons, backbiters, haters of
+God, despiteful, inventors of evil things, implacable, unmerciful,
+abominable, and those unto every good work reprobate--any and all of
+these characters can and do come to the healers of Christian Science,
+and _not one word is said to them about getting salvation_ through
+repentance and living faith in the Savior; but, on the other hand, they
+are received as follows: "As _children of God_ you have a right to the
+healing of your bodies"! The dragon is in it! I warn people to beware.
+"They are the spirits of devils, working miracles," and form an
+important proof that we are near the end of time.
+
+Another form in which the dragon is manifesting his power on the
+deceptive and miracle-working line is modern Spiritualism. Multitudes of
+people of all classes are believers in this soul-destroying doctrine.
+The system is generally acknowledged to be but a modern form of what was
+anciently styled witchcraft, necromancy, magic, etc., while the mediums
+of to-day are of the same class as those formerly known as "witches,"
+"sorcerers," "magicians." This they themselves often admit. The system
+is so well known both in doctrine and in its pernicious effects that I
+will not devote further space to the matter.[15] In many other forms the
+dragon is working his deceptions upon the people.
+
+[Footnote 15: For further consideration of this subject read the book
+"Modern Spiritualism Exposed," by the publishers of this work.]
+
+Millions of church-members and thousands of preachers are numbered among
+these antichristian organizations of Freemasonry, Christian Science,
+Spiritualism, etc., etc., gathered together under the influence of the
+spirits of devils working miracles, mighty signs, and wonders. On the
+other hand, the churches are filled with persons who in spirit are
+nothing but skeptics and infidels. Said T. De Witt Talmage on one
+occasion, "There is a mighty host in the Christian church, positively
+professing Christianity, who _do not believe the Bible_, out and out, in
+and in, from the first word of the first verse of the first chapter of
+the Book of Genesis, down to the last word of the last verse of the last
+chapter of the Book of Revelation." Is it any wonder that such is the
+case when a large number of the preachers themselves are in reality
+skeptics? A newspaper clipping before me contains the following, uttered
+on March 28, 1905, by the Rev. B.A. Green, pastor of the First Baptist
+Church, of Evanstown, Ill., before about a hundred of his fellow
+ministers: "All the truth in the world is not contained in one book, nor
+in books of theology, God was too big for one temple and he is also too
+big for one book. God is everywhere. His truth is found in all good
+books. The pastor of to-day should read the modern psychology and modern
+literature, _especially the works of fiction_ which deal with religious
+or social phases of modern life." A large portion of the sectarian
+ministry reject entirely the Mosaic account of the creation, and accept
+instead the modern theory of evolution.
+
+The following quotation is from the Rev. Minton J. Savage, pastor of the
+Church of the Messiah, New York, N.Y., who is an acknowledged leader in
+the "higher criticism." This was in answer to an attack made on the
+higher critics by a convention of the American Bible League. "The men
+who are leading in the higher criticism of the Bible and who are now
+being assailed so bitterly by the American Bible League, are
+representative scholars of the world, scientific thinkers, leaders,
+teachers, who have given us a new universe, a new conception of God, a
+new idea concerning the origin and nature of man. They are not seeking
+to support or to undermine anything. They are seeking for the truth as
+the only sacred thing on earth.
+
+"I would like to consider what this book is about over which all this
+controversy is raging. It is really not one book, but sixty-six small
+volumes. They were written during a period of nearly a thousand years,
+in different countries, by different people. The first book was written
+about eight hundred years before Christ. The first five books of the
+Bible were written between five and six hundred years before Christ. The
+historical books tell us about the day of Judges, then of Kings, the
+wars of Israel, until the time of captivity. Then the book of Job,
+purely anonymous, and no one knows who wrote it. Then the book of the
+Psalms, the hymn-book of the people of Israel, and the books of the
+prophets. It would be more proper to call them preachers, for they make
+no effort to foretell anything, but merely told the people that if they
+followed certain lines of conduct certain things would happen.
+
+"No book was placed in the Bible by anything that claimed to be divine
+authority. No law concerning the Biblical canon was ever issued by the
+church earlier than the sixteenth century and that changed nothing; it
+simply recognized what had come to be a fact. These books drifted
+together and came to be bound as one, by force of gravity, by common
+consent, and there are one or two books in the New Testament which
+scholars could miss without feeling any the poorer.
+
+"Nobody, then, is assaulting the Bible, for the simple reason that the
+Bible as such has never made any claim. The Bible does not claim to be
+inspired; it does not claim to be infallible. No writer of one book is
+authorized to speak for the author of any other book. One verse is
+sometimes referred to as meaning something. The writer of the last book
+in the Bible utters a curse against anybody who should presume to add to
+or take from the words of that book. He does not say that the book is
+infallible; he simple curses anybody that interferes with it, as
+Shakespeare uttered a curse against anybody who interfered with his
+bones. I suppose that God might have given us an infallible book, if he
+had chosen, and if he had given us such a book he would have made us
+sure that it was infallible."
+
+"If I were compelled to believe that God holds me responsible for Adam's
+sin and that the immense majority of the world is doomed to everlasting
+torment, and that only a selected few here and there are to enter
+eternal felicity, I might bow my head and accept it, but I could not
+rejoice in it. It is barbarous. Men who try to make us accept such
+dogmas are the real infidels of the world, and it is infidelity which
+they are creating--infidelity a hundred times worse than that which they
+call by the name. If you would blot out every Bible in the world to-day
+you would not even endanger its life, nor would you destroy religion."
+From _The Toledo News-Bee_, May 14, 1904.
+
+All these allied powers of wickedness in conflict with the few of God's
+saints who serve him acceptably, constitute the battle of
+Armageddon--that battle of the last great day. It is not a literal
+collecting of armies nor a literal conflict, but a fierce battle between
+truth and error. The outward indications are that the enemies of God
+will triumph; but let us remember that it is destined to "end in the
+victory of Him unto whom triumph belongs." Fire will come down from God
+out of heaven and devour them. This symbol is doubtless taken from the
+circumstance of Elijah where he commanded fire to come down and destroy
+his enemies; and it will be as with such an overthrow that the powers of
+wickedness shall meet their doom in that last great day of God Almighty.
+
+ 11. And I saw a great white throne, and him that sat on it, from
+ whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was
+ found no place for them.
+
+ 12. And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; and
+ the books were opened; and another book was opened, which is the
+ book of life: and the dead were judged out of those things which
+ were written in the books, according to their works.
+
+ 13. And the sea gave up the dead which were in it; and death and
+ hell delivered up the dead which were in them: and they were
+ judged every man according to their works.
+
+ 14. And death and hell were cast, into the lake of fire. This is
+ the second death.
+
+ 15. And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was
+ cast into the lake of fire.
+
+This series of events, as far as it pertains to the doom of evil men,
+ends properly with verse 10, where the combined powers of wickedness are
+represented as being cast into the lake of fire. This last event,
+however, is in the present scene more fully described. It is fitting
+that the judgment scene should be more fully described; for with this
+chapter we have the last special history of the powers of evil given.
+Many times we have been led up to the time of the final overthrow of all
+the powers of wickedness, but the manner in which that great event
+occurs has not been perfectly detailed.
+
+Here we have another illustration of that principle of symbolic language
+laid down in the beginning--that objects and events whose nature forbids
+their symbolization appear under their own names or titles and their
+description must of necessity be literal. The appearance of the great
+God must be considered an actual event; for, as clearly shown, he can
+not be symbolized, neither can he appear as the symbol of some other
+object, from the fact that there is no other object of analagous nature
+of which he could stand as the representative. The resurrection of
+itself is an event of such a peculiar nature as to forbid its
+symbolization. What is there analagous to it which could here be
+employed? There are, perhaps, analagous changes in the vegetable and
+animal kingdoms; but symbols drawn from that quarter would indicate some
+political change instead. Paul may, indeed, speak of the decay and the
+growth of seeds to _illustrate_ the resurrection; but the decay of a
+seed does not _symbolize_ the death of a saint, neither does its
+germination _symbolize_ his resurrection. Nor is there any change that
+can do it. There is the same necessity of speaking of the resurrection
+in its literal meaning as there was of representing the spirits of the
+martyrs under their own appropriate titles.
+
+The earth and the heaven fleeing away from before God's presence so that
+no place is found for them, must be understood as describing the literal
+dissolution of this world when Christ comes; for it is clear from the
+Scriptures that such an event will occur at that time. Peter says that
+"the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which
+_the heavens shall pass away_ with a great noise, and the elements shall
+melt with fervent heat, _the earth also_ and the works that are therein
+_shall be burned up_." 2 Pet. 3:10. Nothing can be found to symbolize
+perfectly such a mighty event; hence it appears as a literal description
+of the final catastrophe of this old world.
+
+It is evident that there are symbols connected with this appearance of
+God, as truly as there were symbols connected with Christ in his
+appearance in chap. 19. The _throne_ is a symbol of judgment and of
+supreme sovereignty, its dazzling whiteness indicating the impartiality
+and justice of the proceedings. The _books_, likewise, are symbols. We
+are not to suppose that there are literal books in heaven, in which
+Christ or some angelic secretary notes down all the affairs of earth.
+The language and the symbols of Scripture are accommodated to the human
+understanding, hence books are used as a symbol to denote that the
+character and the actions of men are all as perfectly known and
+remembered as if they had been recorded in the archives of heaven. The
+_book of life_, in which the names of the faithful are often said to be
+inscribed, denotes that God knows all his chosen people. In the
+following chapter it is called the Lamb's book of life.
+
+This scene, then, as a whole, is a sublime description of the
+resurrection and the final judgment of all men and the dissolution of
+the earth on which we now live. That the righteous will be judged at
+this time is shown by the fact that the book of life, in which the names
+of the righteous only are recorded (Chap. 21:27; Exod. 32:33), will also
+be opened; and verse fifteen implies that the names of some during this
+judgment scene were found recorded in that book. The wicked receive
+their eternal portion by being cast into the lake of fire; while the
+reward of the righteous is described in the remaining part of this
+series, contained in the two following chapters.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+
+ And I saw a new heaven and a new earth: for the first heaven and
+ the first earth were passed away; and there was no more sea.
+
+ 2. And I John saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from
+ God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband.
+
+ 3. And I heard a great voice out of heaven saying, Behold, the
+ tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and
+ they shall be his people, and God himself shall be with them,
+ and be their God.
+
+ 4. And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there
+ shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither
+ shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed
+ away.
+
+The events of this chapter are a continuation of the series of prophecy
+considered in the preceding one, only describing an entirely different
+phase--the final reward and eternal home of God's people. We have traced
+many series of prophecies through the long weary pathway of centuries,
+only to find the termination of the powers of wickedness in the lake of
+fire at the end of time or their overthrow otherwise set forth under
+appropriate symbols; but in no instance has the final reward of God's
+people after the judgment been fully described. That glorious event of
+the future was referred to in chap. 7 as the final in-gathering of the
+redeemed "of all nations, and kindreds, and people, and tongues." The
+description however, was incomplete. Since the eternal abode of the
+wicked is referred to often, the subject would seem incomplete without a
+description of the final glories and triumphs of the redeemed in their
+future and eternal home. Though their earthly pilgrimage is fraught with
+sorrow, death, pain, wretchedness, and misery, by the hands of their
+violent oppressors, yet they shall witness the complete overthrow of all
+their enemies in the lake that burns with fire and brimstone, and they
+themselves shall be rewarded eternally; for "God shall wipe away all
+tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow,
+neither crying, neither shall there be any more pain; for the former
+things are passed away." It is fitting that such a sublime theme should
+be reserved as the grand climax of the book of Revelation.
+
+With the dissolution of the earth on which we live, which event has just
+been described, it is evident that the many lines of prophecy leading up
+to that great event are no longer under special consideration, but that
+a new theme subsequent to the judgment scene is introduced with the
+words of the Revelator immediately following--"I saw _a new heaven and a
+new earth:_ for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away;
+and there was no more sea." The heaven, earth, and sea that passed away
+certainly refers to the earth that now is and to the aerial heaven
+surrounding it; therefore the new heaven and the new earth brought to
+view must signify the future and eternal home that Jesus went to
+prepare. We could not consistently make the one literal and the other
+symbolical. This accords perfectly with the teaching of the apostle
+Peter where he says: "The day of the Lord will come as a thief in the
+night; in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and
+the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and the works
+that are therein shall be burned up.... Nevertheless we, according to
+his promise, look for _new heavens and a new earth_, wherein dwelleth
+righteousness." 2 Pet. 3:10-13.
+
+The holy city of God, the New Jerusalem, is next introduced. Since this
+meets its fulfilment in the new order of things subsequent to the
+judgment scene, it must have special reference to the future abode of
+the saints in the new earth. Many of the symbols here describing the New
+Jerusalem, and even New Jerusalem itself, are often used to set forth
+the church of God in the New Testament dispensation. The church on earth
+and the church of God in heaven are in one important sense the same
+thing, as they constitute but one family (Eph. 3:15); yet in another
+sense there is a difference, and the proper distinction must be observed
+even when the same symbols or titles are used to describe or designate
+both phases. A similar two-foldness is seen in many lines of truth. In
+Heb. 12:22, 23, we are represented as dwelling in the city of God in
+this dispensation; yet verse 27 of this chapter and the fourteenth of
+the following chapter plainly show our entrance into the city at the
+end. The Scriptures represent God as dwelling on earth in his church,
+which, of course, is considered in a spiritual sense; but his actual
+throne and place of abode is in heaven. A new creation brought about by
+Christ in his first advent is set forth by various texts; still, it
+remains a fact that a new creation will actually be brought to view
+after the present world is no more and that the same will be our eternal
+home. We obtain spiritual life through Christ now, hence have right to
+the tree of life; yet in another sense our access to the tree of life is
+at the end and we then enter in through the gates into the city. Chap.
+22:14. Hence it is proper to speak of the city of God as both present
+and future, by observing the proper distinction, just as the Scriptures
+speak of the church in a twofold sense as being both on earth and in
+heaven, or of the spiritual kingdom in the present and the eternal
+kingdom in the end. It is Scriptural to speak of God's throne as being
+on earth in the midst of his saints in a spiritual sense and also of its
+being located in heaven. The tree of life is a present realization
+spiritually and also a future reality. We dwell in the city of God
+now--in the suburbs, as it were--but we shall "have a right" to it in
+the future state when we are ushered into the very heart of the great
+metropolis and stand before the actual throne of the Deity, in the
+presence of his August Majesty.
+
+In the New Testament dispensation the heavenly elements of the New
+Jerusalem have descended to earth in the form of the new covenant, and
+God's people obtain a foretaste of heaven's glory and are made pure even
+as Christ is pure, and are therefore represented as having "come unto
+Mount Sion, and unto the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem"
+(Heb. 12:22, 23); and God dwells with them in a very important sense. 2
+Cor. 6:16. They are one with the redeemed above, and together they
+constitute one "family in heaven and earth," all loving the same Father,
+adoring the same King, drinking from the same fountain of life eternal,
+and all basking in the same divine light that beams from the throne of
+God. In another sense, however, there is a difference between them; for
+they are separated by the line of mortality, one phase being located on
+earth and the other in heaven. But when at the last day the redeemed of
+earth have access to the tree of life in its perfect sense, there will
+be henceforth only one phase to the New Jerusalem, or church of God,
+which will be in its relation to the new earth, as specially described
+in the prophecy under consideration, when "_all things_" are made new
+and "the former things are passed away."
+
+ 5. And he that sat upon the throne said, Behold, I make all
+ things new. And he said unto me, Write: for these words are true
+ and faithful.
+
+ 6. And he said unto me, It is done. I am Alpha and Omega, the
+ beginning and the end. I will give unto him that is athirst of
+ the fountain of the water of life freely.
+
+ 7. He that overcometh shall inherit all things; and I will be
+ his God, and he shall be my son.
+
+ 8. But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and
+ murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and
+ all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with
+ fire and brimstone: which is the second death.
+
+The declarations contained in these verses proceed from God himself and
+announce the fact that he hath now fulfilled all that he designed. His
+promises to his faithful children are brought to pass, as well as his
+threatening to his foes. All things are made new and the former things
+are passed away. Not only has the strife, the commotion, and the sin in
+the old order of things passed away, but the new creation, wherein
+dwelleth righteousness, has been introduced, the grand long-looked-for
+era of eternal blessedness to the saints. Oh, halleluiah! "And he said
+unto me, Write: for these words are true and faithful."
+
+"And he said unto me, It is done. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning
+and the end." When the seventh angel of chap. 16:17 poured out his vial,
+the voice of God from the throne said, "It is done," signifying that the
+last judgments were complete. Here again the same voice is heard as
+before, referring to the same thing--the accomplishment of God's great
+purposes. The enemies of the church have been overthrown, her long
+period of warfare has ended, and the eternal day of Zion's glory has
+come. Then follow his blessed promises held out to the faithful, and
+also the reward to the wicked. These are to be understood as referring
+to these classes, not at the day of judgment, but when the Revelation
+was given to John and therefore to us. "I will give unto him that is
+athirst of the fountain of the water of life freely. He that overcometh
+shall inherit all things [in the margin, _these things_]: and I will be
+his God, and he shall be my son." "This is the reward in reserve for
+those who endure through this period of trial and overcome at last. They
+shall drink of living waters, which will be sweet and refreshing indeed
+to those who have toiled through this fight; and they shall inherit
+these things--these new heavens and earth. God shall be their God, and
+they his sons. Oh, what an honor! what a destiny in reserve for the
+faithful! with what glorious anticipations may the believer look forward
+to the revelations of that day, and with Paul say, 'If by any means I
+may attain unto the resurrection of the dead.'
+
+"What warning also to the wicked! The same voice that utters the
+promise, pronounces also the threatening. 'The fearful, and unbelieving,
+and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and
+idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part in the lake which
+burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the second death.' God says,
+'These words are true and faithful.' They came from him who sat upon the
+throne, the Alpha and Omega. He has put his everlasting seal to them,
+and pledged his veracity to their truth." Dear reader, will you accept
+the word of Him who can not lie and choose to suffer affliction with the
+people of God until our Lord shall come to call his ransomed home? Or
+will you decide to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season, only to be
+resurrected at the last great day to "shame and everlasting contempt"?
+There is no intimation of future salvation for the transgressor. The
+lake of fire still stands as the symbol of eternal destruction, and into
+it the fearful and unbelieving and wicked of every name are cast.
+
+ 9. And there came unto me one of the seven angels which had the
+ seven vials full of the seven last plagues, and talked with me,
+ saying, Come hither, I will show thee the bride, the Lamb's
+ wife.
+
+ 10. And he carried me away in the spirit to a great and high
+ mountain, and showed me that great city, the holy Jerusalem,
+ descending out of heaven from God,
+
+ 11. Having the glory of God: and her light was like unto a stone
+ most precious, even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal;
+
+ 12. And had a wall great and high, and had twelve gates, and at
+ the gates twelve angels, and names written thereon, which are
+ the names of the twelve tribes of the children of Israel:
+
+ 13. On the east three gates; on the north three gates; on the
+ south three gates; and on the west three gates.
+
+ 14. And the wall of the city had twelve foundations, and in them
+ the names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb.
+
+ 15. And he that talked with me had a golden reed to measure the
+ city, and the gates thereof, and the wall thereof.
+
+ 16. And the city lieth foursquare, and the length is as large as
+ the breadth: and he measured the city with the reed, twelve
+ thousand furlongs. The length and the breadth and the height of
+ it are equal.
+
+ 17. And he measured the wall thereof, an hundred and forty and
+ four cubits, according to the measure of a man, that is, of the
+ angel.
+
+ 18. And the building of the wall of it was of jasper: and the
+ city was pure gold, like unto clear glass.
+
+ 19. And the foundations of the wall of the city were garnished
+ with all manner of precious stones. The first foundation was
+ jasper; the second, sapphire; the third, a chalcedony; the
+ fourth, an emerald;
+
+ 20. The fifth, sardonyx; the sixth, sardius; the seventh,
+ chrysolyte; the eighth, beryl; the ninth, a topaz; the tenth, a
+ chrysoprasus; the eleventh, a jacinth; the twelfth, an amethyst.
+
+ 21. And the twelve gates were twelve pearls; every several gate
+ was of one pearl: and the street of the city was pure gold, as
+ it were transparent glass.
+
+ 22. And I saw no temple therein: for the Lord God Almighty and
+ the Lamb are the temple of it.
+
+ 23. And the city had no need of the sun, neither of the moon, to
+ shine in it: for the glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb
+ is the light thereof.
+
+ 24. And the nations of them which are saved shall walk in the
+ light of it: and the kings of the earth do bring their glory and
+ honor into it.
+
+ 25. And the gates of it shall not be shut at all by day: for
+ there shall be no night there.
+
+ 26. And they shall bring the glory and honor of the nations into
+ it.
+
+ 27. And there shall in no wise enter into it any thing that
+ defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination, or maketh a
+ lie: but they which are written in the Lamb's book of life.
+
+We have here a magnificent description of the New Jerusalem,
+representing the home of the redeemed. The various symbols employed in
+its description must of course he understood as symbolical. We have no
+means of knowing just what our future home will be like; but that it
+will be a place of wondrous beauty and transcendent glory is shown by
+the fact that everything which is considered grand and glorious in this
+world is here chosen to represent the home of the redeemed. The symbols
+selected to describe it are objects of such priceless worth, even
+exceeding royal splendor, that we pause in astonishment and exclaim,
+"What must the reality be?" The conditions upon which entrance to this
+city may be obtained (ver. 27; chap. 22:14) show clearly that our future
+and eternal home is the chief burden of this vision and not merely our
+spiritual inheritance in this world.
+
+"In approaching Jerusalem, the traveller is not aware of its proximity,
+until, ascending an eminence, the glorious city bursts upon his
+astonished vision, when he is ready to exclaim with the
+Psalmist--'Beautiful for situation, the joy of the whole earth is Mount
+Zion, on the sides of the north, the city of the great king.'" Psa.
+48:2. John was carried to "a great and high mountain," from which
+commanding point of view he was enabled to survey in all its boundless
+extent the surpassing glories of the New Jerusalem. Never did
+imagination conceive anything approaching the sublimity and grandeur of
+the scene here described by the pen of inspiration. It was "a great
+city"--how great we shall soon discover--the _holy_ Jerusalem,
+descending out of heaven from God.
+
+The ancient city of Jerusalem was regarded as sacred because in it God
+had recorded his name, and it contained his holy temple, his place of
+residence on earth. Thither the tribes of Israel went up to worship;
+"Jerusalem is the place where men ought to worship." So, also, this New
+Jerusalem was "_the holy city_," an antitype of the former. It is
+described as "having the glory of God, and her light was like unto a
+stone most precious, even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal." "The
+glory of God" was that visible manifestation, called the Shekinah, which
+Jehovah made of himself in the tabernacle of his ancient people. The
+following facts concerning it will give us an understanding of its
+signification as connected with the New Jerusalem:
+
+"Jehovah was the accepted King and Lawgiver of his people Israel, and he
+had his tabernacle among them, where he abode by his presence, where he
+might be approached and consulted, and make communications of his will.
+That visible presence was 'the glory of God' or the Shekinah; and the
+Jews regarded it with the highest possible veneration, as the embodiment
+of the Deity. The sacred writers often speak of it in the same terms as
+of Jehovah himself. They refer to this when they speak of _seeing God_.
+'Then went up Moses and Aaron, Nadab and Abihu, and seventy of the
+elders of Israel, _and they saw the God of Israel_.' Ex. 24:9, 10. 'I
+saw also the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, and his
+train filled the temple.' Isa. 6:1. And again in verse 5: 'For mine eyes
+_have seen_ the King, the Lord of hosts.' The spiritual essence of God
+can not, of course, be revealed to mortal vision, yet there was a
+manifestation of the Deity which was made visible to the eyes of men,
+and which Moses and Isaiah speak of as _seeing God_. It is spoken of as
+the _presence_ and _face_ of Jehovah. 'And he said, _My presence_ shall
+go with thee, and I will give thee rest.' Ex. 33:14. 'And the Lord spake
+unto Moses _face to face_, as a man speaketh unto his friend.' Ex.
+33:11."
+
+The New Jerusalem that John saw descending from God--which denotes its
+heavenly origin--had "the glory of God: and her light was like unto a
+stone most precious, even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal." It
+dazzled as the purest diamond. In verse 23 we are informed that it
+illuminated the whole city so that there was "no need of the sun,
+neither of the moon, to shine in it: for the _glory of God did lighten
+it, and the Lamb is the light thereof_." In ancient times "the glory of
+God" filled the _tabernacle_, the place of his abode; but here it filled
+_the whole city_. In that tabernacle the Shekinah was the manifestation
+of the divine glory of Jehovah. In the New Jerusalem Jesus Christ, who
+is "the brightness of his glory, and the express image of his person,"
+illuminates the entire city of God. Oh, halleluiah!
+
+In olden times the cities were surrounded with walls, designed as a
+defense against all enemies. The more important the city, the higher and
+stronger were the walls built. Having walls, it was necessary also to
+have gates to furnish ingress and egress to the inhabitants. These gates
+were in charge of faithful guardians, who had authority to open and to
+close them according to the regulations of the city. In accordance with
+this idea the city of God is represented as having "a wall great and
+high." This wall represents the security of Zion, whose inhabitants
+within can rest in peace and safety. The three gates on each side
+represent the free and easy access into the city from every quarter.
+Anciently, it was customary to give names to the gates of a city, just
+as we now do to our streets. The gates of this holy city were named
+after the twelve tribes of the children of Israel, which embraced all
+God's ancient covenant people, and which denotes the perfection and
+completeness of our heavenly home as including all the spiritual Israel.
+
+"And the wall of the city had twelve foundations, and in them the names
+of the twelve apostles of the Lamb." The twelve foundations, or rather
+the twelve courses of stone in the foundation, are more fully described
+hereafter. The names of the twelve tribes were on the gates to denote
+that the city was composed of God's true and complete Israel, and the
+names of the twelve apostles are on the foundation to denote that this
+contains the church which was "built upon the foundation of the apostles
+and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief cornerstone." Eph.
+2:20. The system of truth that they preached to the world forms the
+doctrinal basis of the church of God, they having received it from
+heaven "by inspiration of God," and their names all appear; and together
+they constitute one harmonious, solid foundation upon which the church
+shall stand forever.
+
+The dimensions of the city as measured by the angel are next given as
+twelve thousand furlongs, or one thousand five hundred miles. By the
+statement that the length, the breadth and the height are equal, some
+have supposed that the city was one thousand five hundred miles high. To
+quote the words of a certain commentator: "The language, however, will
+bear another meaning, which is far more natural. It is not that the
+length and breadth and height were severally equal to _each other_, but
+_equal with themselves_; that is the length was everywhere the same, the
+breadth everywhere the same, and the height the same. It was perfect and
+symmetrical in all its proportions. This is confirmed by the fact
+distinctly stated, that the wall was one hundred and forty and four
+cubits high, or two hundred and sixteen feet, a proper height for a
+wall; while it is said only that 'the length is as large as the
+breadth.'" This writer reckoned but eighteen inches for a cubit, whereas
+some figure twenty-two. A city one thousand and five hundred miles high
+with a wall only two hundred and sixteen or two hundred and sixty four
+feet high, would be altogether out of proportion.
+
+The wondrous dimensions of this city set forth the fact that our future
+home far exceeds in grandeur and extent everything that is looked upon
+as glorious upon earth. Who ever heard of a city one thousand and five
+hundred miles square? We have had empires so large, but no such cities.
+In this representation the city does not encompass the entire earth as
+she in one sense really does, because it would be impossible thus to
+represent her and at the same time she be represented as a city within
+the earth, into which the nations bring their "glory and honor." The
+ancient city of Babylon with its beautiful hanging-gardens, the very
+triumph of human skill, and the city itself lying in a foursquare, being
+fifteen miles on each side, was unsurpassed in human loveliness. But the
+city of God is represented as _fifteen hundred_ miles square, which
+dimensions are out of all proportion with anything existing on earth;
+hence its beauty and magnificence must be ascribed to God only.
+
+"And the building of the wall of it was of jasper: and the city was pure
+gold like unto clear glass." The jasper is the same crystal gem before
+mentioned. What a wondrous wall it must have been! It was not made of
+such common material as granite, freestone, or marble, which can make
+the most imposing structures that human pride can rear, and which are
+fit for the residence of lofty kings; but it was of jasper, clear as
+crystal. Think of the wall of this holy city being nearly three hundred
+feet high and stretching around the city six thousand miles, all built
+of the purest diamond! No stretch of the human imagination can properly
+compass such a vision. In rearing earthly structures men seek such
+material as combine durability, cheapness, beauty, and ease of being
+wrought. Look at this wall! For _durability_, it has the most
+indestructible material that can be found on earth. For _beauty_, the
+language of man can not even convey a meagre description of its amazing
+loveliness. For _cheapness_--God's riches were inexhaustible, hence it
+was not necessary to take this into consideration. For _ease of being
+wrought_--think of the vast amount of labor it requires to cut and shape
+even one large diamond, it being said to require in some cases years of
+incessant toil; yet God could afford to build the wall of this city of
+such material. Oh, wonders of God's handiwork! How inexpressibly
+glorious! This, my dear reader, symbolizes the priceless worth of our
+eternal home, secured through the atonement. Study the plan of
+redemption. There is nothing equal to it in the universe. "What is a man
+profited, if he gain the whole world, and _lose his own soul_?"
+
+Men become greatly agitated over the announcement of the discovery of
+gold in the Klondyke, in the Australian continent, in California, and
+with feverish excitement they abandon their homes and rush headlong to
+the reputed El Dorado, fearing neither famine, storms, deserts, nor the
+icy northern blasts. But all the gold ever mined from the bowels of the
+earth is insignificant and forms no comparison with the representation
+of this city. Its streets and mansions were built, not of common cement,
+lumber, nor even granite and marble, but _of pure gold_.
+
+The twelve courses of stone in the foundation of the wall have already
+been mentioned. It is here particularly described. One might suppose
+that, according to human custom, rougher material would be selected for
+the foundation. Not so, however. The most brilliant and costly gems were
+chosen to lay these courses. Nothing cheap nor common had anything to do
+in the construction of this marvelous city. It was altogether beyond the
+reach of men to imitate: it was God's own handiwork; and we can not but
+admire its wondrous beauty. It is unnecessary to give a minute
+description of the gems of which these foundation-courses were composed.
+They were the most beautiful and costly of which men possess any
+knowledge. In appearance they represent various colors of the most
+delicate shades. Royal persons wear even the smallest of these gems upon
+their persons and imagine themselves richly adorned; but in this city of
+God they appear in such abundance that they are even selected to form
+the basis, or foundation, of the wall. "And the twelve gates were twelve
+pearls; every several gate was of one pearl." We have rich necklaces of
+pearl; but where is the individual that was ever blessed with such a
+profusion of wealth that he could ornament the gates of a city with
+pearls? The gates of the New Jerusalem, however, were not merely
+ornamented or studded with pearls--that were a very small thing for
+her--but each gate was of one solid pearl. To conceive the immensity of
+this representation we must consider the size of the gates required to
+accommodate the multitudes constantly entering and departing from a
+city. To be in proportion to the wall they would have to be of immense
+size, and also of prodigious strength in order to resist the assaults of
+enemies, as they would be the first places attacked. The gate of the
+temple called Beautiful, mentioned in the Book of Acts, which was in the
+wall surrounding the temple, is said to have been seventy-five feet high
+and sixty in width, built of Corinthian brass. Yet immense as they were,
+those in the New Jerusalem were each of one solid pearl. Oh, beautiful
+city of God, the home of the saints!
+
+The most prominent object within the walls of the ancient Jerusalem was
+the magnificent temple on Mount Zion. It was the chief ornament and
+glory of the city. In the New Jerusalem, however, no temple is seen.
+Alas! is not this a great defect? What is Jerusalem without a temple
+where the tribes may go up and worship before the Lord? Oh, they need no
+temple in this glorious city of God; for there is one there greater than
+the temple: "the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple of it."
+This doubtless sets forth the fact that the worship of God is pure and
+spiritual and of free access to all. Under the old dispensation the high
+priest alone, and he but once a year, was permitted to enter the sacred
+precincts of the Deity as limited to the inner sanctuary of the temple.
+Now God's people need no mediating priest to offer up a special
+sacrifice that the will of God might be known; but all are kings and
+priests who offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus
+Christ (1 Pet. 2:5); yea, as saith the prophet, "they _shall all know
+me_ from the least of them unto the greatest of them, saith the Lord."
+Jer. 31:34. No temple is needed that the Shekinah of the divine presence
+may take up its abode between the cherubim in the most holy place, but
+"the glory of the Lord" fills the entire city. It can not be confined to
+a given locality. "The Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple of
+it," and they constitute the glory of the New Jerusalem as did the
+temple on Mount Zion that of the old.
+
+"The nations of them which are saved shall walk in the light of it." Can
+any one conceive the grandeur and the sublimity of the scene when a
+light that eclipses the sun and the moon is reflected from streets and
+mansions of gold, or comes streaming through a wall composed of the most
+brilliant gems of different hues, with gates of solid pearl? No wonder,
+then, that the poet has denominated it "the beautiful light of God"! The
+gates are open continuously, for they are not closed by day, and "there
+shall be no night there." But "there shall in no wise enter into it
+anything that defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination, or
+maketh a lie: but they which are written in the Lamb's book of Life."
+This, my dear reader, is the reward of the New Testament church, "the
+church of God."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+
+ And he showed me a pure river of water of life, dear as crystal,
+ proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb.
+
+ 2. In the midst of the street of it, and on either side of the
+ river, was there the tree of life, which bare twelve manner of
+ fruits, and yielded her fruit every month: and the leaves of the
+ tree were for the healing of the nations.
+
+ 3. And there shall be no more curse: but the throne of God and
+ of the Lamb shall be in it; and his servants shall serve him:
+
+ 4. And they shall see his face; and his name shall be in their
+ foreheads.
+
+ 5. And there shall be no night there; and they need no candle,
+ neither light of the sun; for the Lord God giveth them light:
+ and they shall reign for ever and ever.
+
+The description of the New Jerusalem continues in the first five verses
+of this chapter. By the "river of the water of life" is doubtless meant
+full salvation, which as a mighty flowing stream issues "out of the
+throne of God and of the Lamb." To this fountain of living waters an
+invitation is now given to all to come and partake to their
+satisfaction. "The Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that
+heareth say, Come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life
+freely." Verse 17. As a defense to God's people in this world salvation
+is represented as a great wall surrounding them (Isa. 26:12); but as a
+source of joy, holiness and happiness, it is a living stream whereof all
+may partake. While this symbol meets an appropriate fulfilment in the
+present dispensation, yet salvation will also be the eternal possession
+of the saints in the world to come, when "they shall hunger no more,
+neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun light on them, nor any
+heat. For the Lamb, which is in the midst thereof, shall feed them, and
+shall _lead them unto living fountains of waters_; and God shall wipe
+away all tears from their eyes." Chap. 7:16, 17.
+
+In a most appropriate place, upon the banks of the river, grew "the tree
+of life, which bare twelve manner of fruits, and yielded her fruit every
+month: and the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations."
+The tree of life in the garden of Eden was a symbol of man's immortality
+or incorruption, or rather the _means_ of it; for after his fall it was
+securely guarded and he driven from the garden, "lest he put forth his
+hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever"
+(Gen. 3:22) and thus frustrate the decree of God just uttered--that he
+should return unto dust and corruption. In the New Jerusalem, however,
+that tree of life blooms again and bears fruit abundantly, yea
+continuously, as symbolized by "every month," and no cherubim with
+flaming sword are placed to guard all approach to it. The privilege is
+open; for it is added immediately, "There _shall be no more curse_."
+This, then, symbolizes the removal of spiritual death and the
+impartation of everlasting life in this world and immortality in the
+next. The tree of life grew on both sides of the river. On this side of
+the line of mortality we have access to it in one important sense, while
+those in the future world are preserved also by its healing benefits.
+
+The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit abide in this city. God reveals
+himself, not to a few chosen priests only through the Shekinah of his
+presence, but to all his servants--"they all see his face." As in the
+ancient tabernacle he manifested himself by "the glory of the Lord," or
+the Shekinah, which was represented as "seeing his face"; so, also, the
+"glory of the Lord" abides in the New Jerusalem, filling the entire city
+with the holy manifestation of the divine presence. His people are
+"sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise," by which they possess the
+name of their Father--not the name of the beast nor of his image, but
+_the name of the Father_.
+
+"And there shall be no night there; and they need no candle, neither
+light of the sun; for the Lord God giveth them light: and they shall
+reign forever and ever." This city has no need of natural or artificial
+light, "for the Lamb is the light thereof." Chap. 21:23. The light of
+the sun stands connected with the light of a candle and both are
+represented as unnecessary, which denotes that "there shall be no night
+there," but one clear eternal day.
+
+ 6. And he said unto me, These sayings are faithful and true: and
+ the Lord God of the holy prophets sent his angel to show unto
+ his servants the things which must shortly be done.
+
+ 7. Behold, I come quickly: blessed is he that keepeth the
+ sayings of the prophecy of this book.
+
+The language of symbols is discontinued. With the description of the New
+Jerusalem closes the grand panoramic scene of this book. Wondrous indeed
+have been the events of earth prophetically outlined, but we have the
+assurance that "these things are faithful and true." A continuous
+political and ecclesiastical history of that portion of the earth made
+the subject of Apocalyptic vision, from the dawn of Christianity until
+the last day, was here written down in advance. After the permanent
+division of the empire, which occurred under Valens and Valentinian[16]
+in A.D. 364, it was necessary that the political and the ecclesiastical
+history of the empire should be divided in the prophecy. This
+inspiration has done. The downfall of the Western empire is clearly
+predicted in the symbols under the first four trumpets; but the eclipse
+is afterwards lifted, and the same Western empire again appears in
+Imperial form under the control of the Papacy. After giving their power
+and strength unto the beast during the Dark Ages, the horns afterward
+turn against the Papacy and rob her of all her temporal authority and
+power, thus pointing us clearly to the history of modern Europe, in
+which the prophecy has been actually fulfilled. They themselves end at
+the judgment of the last day. Thus, the political history of the Western
+empire is carried through to the end. The Eastern division of the empire
+is also made a subject of prophecy, and its overthrow is described under
+the sixth trumpet. This was effected by the second woe, or the rise of
+the Ottoman power, and that woe is represented as continuing until after
+the death and the resurrection of the two witnesses and terminating
+shortly before the end of time. Therefore the political history of the
+Eastern empire, which has been under the power of the Turks for
+centuries, is outlined until the end. The ecclesiastical history of the
+Eastern empire is also given, its most prominent feature being the rise
+and the development of that pest of Mohammedanism, which rests like a
+dark cloud over that fair country until this day. In the Western
+division the rise of the Papacy, its continuation, the rise of
+Protestantism and its duration, are all clearly outlined, reaching down
+to these last days. Then the scene is suddenly enlarged and is carried
+beyond the limits of the earth--the Apocalyptic earth--into "the whole
+world," when the powers of wickedness are combined in spirit to
+antagonize the reformation of holiness and truth which God is using to
+gather his faithful ones together in preparation for the coming of the
+Son of God to judgment. In view of these wonderful events of the last
+days, how comforting the words of the text before us--"Behold, _I come
+quickly:_ blessed is he that keepeth the sayings of the prophecy of this
+book"!
+
+[Footnote 16: Some historians give A.D. 395 as the date of the permanent
+division of the empire. The government of the Eastern and Western
+divisions was separate from the accession of Valens and Valentinian, in
+364, until during the reign of Theodosius the Great, when the West,
+through the jealous rivalries of different competitors for the throne,
+had fallen into great disorder. Theodosius twice interposed to right
+matters and finally took the government into his own hands for the space
+of four months, in 395, when he died, after arranging for the division
+of the empire between his two sons Arcadius and Honorius.]
+
+ 8. And I John saw these things, and heard them. And when I had
+ heard and seen, I fell down to worship before the feet of the
+ angel which showed me these things.
+
+ 9. Then saith he unto me, See thou do it not: for I am thy
+ fellowservant, and of thy brethren the prophets, and of them
+ which keep the sayings of this book: worship God.
+
+The mind of the apostle was so enraptured with the visions he beheld
+that he could not but adore and worship; but the angel that had been the
+chosen instrument to reveal these prophecies refused his act of homage
+and instructed him to "worship God." Created intelligences are not
+worthy of such respect; to God alone all honor and praise belongs. Jesus
+Christ our Redeemer is God--God over all, blessed forever. As such he is
+worthy of the homage supreme of all our hearts, the praises of all our
+lips.
+
+ 10. And he saith unto me, Seal not the sayings of the prophecy
+ of this book: for the time is at hand.
+
+ 11. He that is unjust, let him be unjust still: and he which is
+ filthy, let him be filthy still: and he that is righteous, let
+ him be righteous still: and he that is holy, let him be holy
+ still.
+
+ 12. And, behold, I come quickly; and my reward is with me, to
+ give every man according as his work shall be.
+
+ 13. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first
+ and the last.
+
+ 14. Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may
+ have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the
+ gates into the city.
+
+ 15. For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers, and
+ murderers, and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie.
+
+The popular opinion is that this book of the Revelation is sealed; but
+John received the direct command, "_Seal not_ the sayings of the
+prophecy of this book." The majority of the teachers of Babylon to-day
+are fulfilling Isaiah 29:9-11, and that is the reason why it has become
+to them a sealed book. God makes known the blessed truths of the
+prophecies of this book to his own beloved children, who walk before him
+in sincerity and truth. A blessing is pronounced upon us if we keep
+them. His coming is near at hand, and his reward is with him to render
+unto every man according as his work shall be. No offers of salvation
+will be extended when Christ appears to give us access to the tree of
+immortal life and an abundant entrance into the eternal city beyond; but
+it will then be said, "He that is unjust, _let him be_ unjust still: and
+he which is filthy, let him be filthy still: and he that is righteous,
+let him be righteous still: and he that is holy, let him be holy still."
+"Dogs" are left without. This term as applied to a person is one of
+great reproach. It is so among us, and much more so among the Jews, by
+whom that animal was regarded as unclean. It signifies evil workers.
+Evil characters of every class will have no part in the heavenly realm,
+but will be cast into the lake of fire. It will be the perfection of
+misery to be banished forever from the presence of God and the
+companionship of all that is good and holy. "Blessed are they that do
+his commandments, that they may have right to the tree of Life, and may
+enter in through the gates into the city."
+
+ 16. I Jesus have sent mine angel to testify unto you these
+ things in the churches. I am the root and the offspring of
+ David, and the bright and morning star.
+
+ 17. And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that
+ heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And
+ whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely.
+
+The statements of these verses have been considered heretofore, hence
+there is no necessity of further comment on them in this connection.
+
+ 18. For I testify unto every man that heareth the words of the
+ prophecy of this book, If any man shall add unto these things,
+ God shall add unto him the plagues that are written in this
+ book:
+
+ 19. And if any man shall take away from the words of the book of
+ this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the book of
+ life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are
+ written in this book.
+
+Here is the most solemn warning against any one who should presume to
+corrupt the prophecies of the Revelation by adding to or taking away
+from them. Nor was such a warning needless. This book contains the long
+history of God's church, and also the history of all her persecutors,
+painted in colors of deepest infamy, and the final doom that awaits
+them. These enemies were to ride in triumph over the earth during a long
+career of centuries, when the children of God should be trodden down
+beneath their feet, as it were, while they boasted themselves as being
+the true church, the anointed of heaven. These Revelations were to be
+handed down to succeeding generations through these very persecutors.
+The great whore of Babylon had her likeness taken and then committed to
+her for preservation. Would she not falsify them? Nearly all the early
+records of the church have been corrupted by the church of Rome. For
+ages it has been a doctrine of that institution that pious fraud was
+consistent and even commendable when practised to further the influence
+of that church. Yea, she has proclaimed openly and unblushingly that if
+her cause could be promoted by deception and lies they were perfectly
+justifiable; and her practise has been consistent with her teachings. In
+view of the fact that God's Word was to pass through the depths of this
+"mystery of iniquity," it is not surprising that we find annexed to this
+concluding portion of Holy Writ the awful anathema: "If any man shall
+add unto these things, God shall add unto him the plagues that are
+written in this book: and if any man shall take away from the words of
+the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the book
+of life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are written
+in this book."
+
+ 20. He which testifieth these things saith, Surely I come
+ quickly. Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus.
+
+ 21. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen.
+
+What importance is attached to the second coming of Christ! Over and
+over again it is stated distinctly. It is the grand climax unto which
+all the series of events in this book leads.
+
+ "Are you ready, waiting for the Lord?
+ See, the signs proclaim him near;
+ In the awful thunders of his Word,
+ Now his coming steps we hear.
+
+ "Now are many running to and fro,
+ Spreading holiness around;
+ And the evening light begins to glow,
+ Soon we'll hear the trumpet's sound.
+
+ "Hark! the solemn warning unto all,
+ Judgment's coming, oh, how soon!
+ Flee, O man, at Mercy's final call,
+ Heaven trembles at your doom.
+
+ "Christ is coming, oh, the heavenly sight!
+ Our Beloved can't delay,
+ For his bride is robed in snowy white,
+ Ready for the marriage-day."
+
+Amen. "Even so come, Lord Jesus." Then will appear the great "Alpha and
+Omega, the beginning and the ending." In the beginning he "created the
+heaven and the earth." In the end, John said, "I saw a new heaven and a
+new earth: for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away;
+and there was no more sea." In the beginning Satan entered the domain of
+God's people to deceive and destroy. In the end he is cast out, and will
+deceive the nations no more. In the beginning sickness, pain, sorrow,
+and wretchedness found entrance to the world. In the end "God shall wipe
+away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more sorrow, nor
+crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are
+passed away." In the beginning the people of earth were placed under the
+iron hand of death, who has claimed his teeming millions. In the end, "I
+saw the dead, small and great, stand before God.... And the sea gave up
+the dead which were in it; and death and hell delivered up the dead
+which were in them ... and death and hell were cast into the lake of
+fire." In the beginning was a blooming garden containing the tree of
+immortal life. In the end we find the tree of life again "in the midst
+of the Paradise of God." In the beginning a curse was placed upon this
+earth. In the world to come "there shall be no more curse: but the
+throne of God and of the Lamb shall be in it." In the beginning the
+first Adam lost his universal dominion over the earth. In the end we
+find Jesus Christ, the second Adam, crowned King of kings and Lord of
+lords, and reigning in triumph and glory forever. In the beginning man
+was barred from the tree of life and driven from the garden of Eden. In
+the end, "Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have
+right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the
+city."
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+A
+
+Aachen, 326.
+Abaddon, 162.
+Abubekr, first caliph, 155.
+Aegean Sea, 36, 46.
+Africa, conquered by Saracens, 160.
+Ahab, 53.
+Alani, 145.
+Alans, 146, 215.
+Alaric, invades Italy, 136-141, 149.
+Ala-Shehr, 63.
+Albi, council of, 339.
+Albigenses, 113, 161, 196, 270, 342.
+Aleppo, 165.
+Alexander I., 172.
+Alexander the Great, 320.
+Alexander VI., Pope, 346, 347.
+Alexandria, 109, 110.
+Alison, A., quoted, 307-315.
+Ammianus Marcellinus, quoted, 188.
+Amiens, 140.
+Ammon, 330.
+Anabaptists, 292.
+Anglo-Saxons, 215.
+Anthony, founder of monasticism, 189, 190.
+Antioch, 104, 109, 110.
+Antioch Epiphanes, 230.
+Antipas, 49.
+Apollo, 241.
+Apollyon, 162.
+Aquinas, Thos., 340, 341.
+Arabia, 330; conquered by Saracens, 160.
+Arras, 140.
+Arcadius, Roman emp., 137, 138, 440, n.
+Argos, 137.
+Armageddon, 332.
+Armenia, 330; conquered by Turks, 165.
+Arnout, Mme., quoted, 310.
+Asbury, Bishop, 368.
+Assyria, 330.
+Astolphus, k. of Lombards, 352, n.
+Athanasius, 190.
+Athens, 137.
+Attalus, 139.
+Atkins, Robert, quoted, 365.
+Attica, 137.
+Attila, 142, 145, 146, 149.
+Atys, 407.
+Augsburg, 191.
+Augsburg Confession (A.D. 1530), 191, 247, 252, 253.
+Augustine, 96.
+Augustines, Order of, 246, 251.
+Augustulus, Roman emp., 148.
+Augustus Caesar, first Roman emp., 222.
+Aurelian, Roman emp., 189.
+Aurelius, Marcus, Roman emp., 46, 98.
+Austerlitz, battle of, 322.
+Avignon, 327; removal of Papal chair to, 305, 306;
+ council of, 339.
+
+
+B
+
+Babylon, taken by Cyrus, 166, 329, 331;
+ great edifices of, 432.
+Babylonian empire, 330, 397.
+Bacchus, 407.
+Bagdad, founded (A.D. 762), 160, 165.
+Balaam, 49, 50.
+Balak, 50.
+Barak, 332.
+Barnes, Dr., quoted, 359.
+Baronius, quoted, 345.
+Barrows, John Henry, quoted, 409, 410.
+Basil, council of, 340.
+Bayazid, Sultan, 61.
+Bedford jail, 36
+Beethoven, 88.
+Behiston rock, noted inscription on, 18, n.
+Belisarius, general of Justinian, 148, 236, 351, n.
+Bellarmine, Cardinal, quoted, 341, 342.
+Benedict IX., Pope, 345, 346.
+Bernard, 197; quoted, 199.
+Beziers, council of, 339.
+Boetia, 137.
+Bohemia, 244, 339.
+Bologna, 327.
+Bonaparte, Jerome, 321.
+Bonaparte, Louis, 321.
+Bonaparte, Joseph, 321.
+Bonaparte, Napoleon, 172, 317, 320-325, 327.
+Boniface IV., Pope, 240.
+Bonney, Chas. Carroll, quoted, 408, 409.
+Borgia, Roderick, 346, 347.
+Bosphorus, 171.
+Bouchard, M., 18, n.
+Buddha, 409.
+Bunyan, John, his imprisonment, 36, n., 293.
+Burgundians, 215.
+Burgundy, 215.
+Burke, quoted, 303.
+Butler, quoted, 222, 223, 224, 230, 231.
+
+
+C
+
+Cadiz, 324.
+Caesar, 320.
+Caesar Augustus, Roman emp., 222.
+Calcedon, council of, 110.
+Calvin, John, reformer, 252
+Calvinists, 252, 291.
+Campbell, Alexander, quoted, 359, 360.
+Canoosa, 111.
+Canterbury, See of, 112, n.
+Carlovingian dynasty, 325, 326, 350-352.
+Carrier, 310, 311.
+Cassini, quoted, 200.
+Cathari, 196.
+Catherine de Medici, 118.
+Catherine the Great of Russia, 172.
+Chaldea, 330.
+Chalons, 146.
+Charlemagne, 236, 305, 320, 325;
+ restores the Western empire, 325, 326, 350-352;
+ patriciate of, 350, 351, also n.
+Charles Martel, 161, 325.
+Charles V., k. of France, 307.
+Charles IX., k. of France, 118.
+Chase, Chas. Wingate, quoted, 405.
+Chaumette, 308, 309.
+Christians,
+ persecutions of, 97, 295;
+ by the Roman emperors (ten seasons of), 98, 116, 230, 231;
+ by the Papacy, 113, 116-118, 196-200, 243, 295, 338-344;
+ by Protestants, 252, 291-294.
+Christian Science, 410, 411.
+Chrysostom, 96.
+Cicero, 222.
+Claudius, quoted, 199.
+Clement of Rome, 95.
+Cologne (wrongly spelled Colonge in text), 197.
+Constance, council of, 244, 245, 339, 345.
+Constantine the Great, 189, 231, 241.
+Constantinople, 158;
+ captured by the Turks (A.D. 1453), 169;
+ council of, 109, 344.
+Constitutionalists, 314.
+Consular power, 214, also n., 351.
+Copenhagen, 324.
+Corinth, 137.
+Council, first of church, 231.
+Councils, general, of church, 109, 231, 321, 339, 340, 345, 346.
+Covenanters, Scotch, 293, 294.
+Creasy, quoted, 324.
+Crellius, 292.
+Croesus, k. of Lydia, 56.
+Crusades, 166.
+Cyprian, 107.
+Cyrus the Great, his capture of Babylon, 166, 329, 331.
+
+
+D
+
+Dacia, 137.
+D'Alembert, 297-303.
+Dalmatia, 136.
+Damascus, 165.
+Daniel, prophecies of, 235-238.
+Danton, 310.
+Dantonists, 315.
+Darwin, 411.
+D'Aubigne, quoted, 96, 185, 191, 192, 195, 208, 209, 244, 245, 247, 253,
+ 276, 277.
+Decemvirate, 214, also n., 351.
+Decius, Roman emp., 98.
+Decretals of Isodore, 344.
+Demetrius, 43.
+Demetrius Cantemir, quoted, 170.
+Diana, 241;
+ temple of at Ephesus, 42, 64.
+Diderot, 297-808.
+Dictator, office of, at Rome, 214, n.
+Diocletian, Roman emp., 48, 98, 230.
+Dionysis, 407.
+Diotrephes, 102, 103.
+Donatists, 342.
+Domitian, Roman emp., 36, 98.
+Domnus, 189.
+Dow, Lorenzo, quoted, 278, 360.
+Dowling, quoted, 187, 188, 189, 190, 196, 241, 243.
+Duke of Alva, 118.
+Du Guesclin, 307.
+Dupin, quoted, 344.
+Dwight, Pres., quoted, 303.
+
+
+E
+
+Easter, 105.
+Eastern Empire, See _Roman Empire_.
+Eastern Question, 172, 173.
+Edgar, quoted, 340.
+Edict of Nantes, 118, 295.
+Egbert, quoted, 196, 197.
+Egypt, conquered by Saracens, 160.
+Elba, Island of, 323, 324.
+Ephesus, fate of, 45, 64, 68; temple at, 42.
+Eudoxia, 143.
+Euphrates, 164, 166; turned by Cyrus, 166, 329, 331.
+Eusebius, quoted, 188, 189.
+Evervinus, quoted. 197-199.
+
+
+F
+
+Farrara, 327.
+Feldkirchen, 247.
+Fisher, Geo., quoted, 103, 189.
+Fletcher, John, quoted, 277.
+Formosus, Pope, 345.
+Foster, Bishop R.S., quoted, 368-370.
+France, invaded by Saracens, 161.
+Francis I., of France, 307.
+Franks, 146, 215.
+Frederick of Saxony, quoted, 247-249.
+Frederick II., k. of Prussia, 297.
+French Revolution, 305-315, 324, 352.
+Freron, quoted, 313, 314.
+Friedland, battle of, 322.
+Fuller, quoted, 340.
+
+
+G
+
+Gallienus, Roman emp., 187
+Gallus, Roman emp., 98.
+Gascoigne, 215.
+Gates, Theophilus R., quoted, 278-283.
+Geneva, 252.
+Genseric, k. of Vandals, 25, 142, 143, 149.
+Germania, 139.
+Gepidae, 145.
+Gibbon, quoted, 64, 136-138, 142, 143, 145, 158, 351.
+Gibbons, Cardinal, quoted 343, 344.
+Gieseler, quoted, 103.
+Girondists, 315.
+Gnostics, 410.
+Gobet, 308.
+Goddess of Reason, 209, 401.
+Goths, 136, 141.
+Greek Empire (Eastern Empire), See _Roman Empire_.
+Green, B.A., quoted, 412, 413.
+Gregory VII., Pope, 111, 184, 242.
+
+
+H
+
+Haeckel, 411.
+Hamlet, 307.
+Handel, 88.
+Hartley, quoted, 361.
+Heads, seven, of dragon and Papal beasts,
+ signifying seven forms of government,
+ 214, also n., 235, 349, 350.
+Hebert, 308, 309.
+Henry VIII., k. of England, 292.
+Henry IV., k. of France, 307.
+Henry IV., emperor of Holy Roman empire, 111.
+Henry, k. of Navarre, 118.
+Hera, 154.
+Hermus, 56.
+Herod Agrippa, 240.
+Herodotus, 166, 329.
+Heruli, 145, 148, 215, 236.
+Hieroglyphics, 18, 19, n.
+Hilarion, 189.
+Hildebrand, See _Gregory VII_.
+Hilton, John, quoted, 246, 247.
+Hiram Abiff, 407.
+Holbach, Baron, 300.
+Holland, 321.
+Holy Roman Empire, 325, 326, 351;
+ dissolved (A.D. 1806), 327.
+Honorius, Roman emp., 136, 138, 139, 440, n.
+Honorius, Pope, 344, 346.
+Hopkins, quoted, 362.
+Horn, the little, of Daniel 7,
+ a symbol of the Papacy, 235-238, 350, 357.
+Horn, of the goat, symbol of Alexander, 20.
+Horns, ten, of the Dragon and Papal beast,
+ signifying ten kingdoms, 14, 215, 235, 236, 349.
+Horns, three, plucked up before the little horn,
+ 236, 350, 351.
+Horns, four, of the goat,
+ symbolizing four divisions of Alexander's empire, 20.
+Hugenots, 118.
+Hugenot wars, 252.
+Hungary, 169, 215.
+Huns, 141, 145, 146, 215.
+Huntington, Lady, 369.
+Huss, John, 62, 244, 245, 249, 339.
+
+
+I
+
+Iconium, 165.
+Ignatius, his epistles, extracts from, 104.
+Illuminati, 297-303, 404.
+Illyricum, 137.
+Indulgences, 250, 251.
+Imperial power, 214, also n.
+Innocent III., Pope, 111, n., 339.
+Innocent XI., Pope, 118.
+Institorus, Henry, quoted, 246.
+Interdicts, 111, also n., 112, also n.
+Ionia, 64.
+Isodore, false Decretals of, 344, 345.
+Islam, See _Mohammedanism_.
+
+
+J
+
+Jena, battle of, 322.
+Jerome, 36, 96.
+Jerome of Prague, 62, 339.
+Jerusalem, captured by Saracens, 110.
+Jezebel, 53.
+John XI., Pope, 345.
+John, k. of England,
+ his quarrel with Innocent III., 112, n.
+Johnson, B.W., quoted, 357-359.
+Judson, quoted, 171, 172, 321.
+Jupiter, 241.
+Justinian, Roman emp., 148, 351, n.
+
+
+K
+
+Kinkade, Wm., quoted, 359.
+Klondyke, 433.
+Koran, 158, 406.
+Kurtz, quoted, 95, 96.
+
+
+L
+
+Laodicea, fate of, 64, 67, 68.
+Lateran, councils of, 329, 339, 340.
+Lavaur, council of, 339.
+Leo III., Pope, 325.
+Leo X., Pope, 250.
+Lepelletier, 308.
+Liszt, 88.
+Lombards, 196.
+Lombards (barbarians), 215, 236, 350.
+Lombardy, 351.
+Lord, Mr., quoted, 100.
+Louis XII., k. of France, 307.
+Louis, XIV., k. of France, 118, 295, 307.
+Lucretia, 347.
+Luther, Martin, reformer,
+ 62, 244, 246, 247, 249, 251,
+ 252, 342; quoted, 361.
+Lutherans, 252, 291.
+Lydia, 56, 64.
+
+
+M
+
+Machiard, 215.
+Mackey, quoted, 405.
+Mackintosh, Sir James, quoted, 323, 324.
+Maecenas, 222.
+Maesia, 215.
+Mahomet, See _Mohammed_.
+Manes, 298.
+Manicheans, 342.
+Mantz, Felix, 292.
+Marat, 308, 310, 311.
+Marathon, battle of, 191.
+Marcellus, Pope, 341.
+Marcus Aurelius, Roman emp., 46, 98.
+Marengo, battle of, 191, 322.
+Marie Antoinette, q. of France, her execution, 306.
+Marozia, 345.
+Marsh, quoted, 186.
+Martin, Pope, 339.
+Mary Tudor, 117.
+Maximus, Roman emp., 98, 143.
+Mecca, 154.
+Megara, 137.
+Megiddo, 332.
+Melanchthon, Philip, 247.
+Mentz, 140.
+Mesopotamia, 330.
+Metropolitan, office of, 105, 106.
+Military Tribunes, 214, also n.
+Milman, quoted, 95.
+Milner, Joseph, quoted, 190, 191.
+Mithras, 407.
+Moab, 330.
+Mohammed, 61, 154-162, 389.
+Mohammedanism, 25, 61, 134, 154-173, 331, 341.
+Moldavia, prince of, 170.
+Momoro, 309.
+Momyllus Augustulus, Roman emp., 148.
+Montanism, 105.
+Monasticism, rise of, 189, 190.
+Montesquieu, 300.
+Morea, 170.
+Moscow, 322, 324.
+Mosheim, quoted, 94, 105, 106, 109.
+Mozart, 87.
+Murat, 321.
+Myers, quoted, 293.
+Mysia, 49.
+Mythra, mysteries of, 298.
+
+
+N
+
+Nantes, 310; edict of, 118, 295.
+Naples, 324.
+Napoleon, See _Bonaparte_.
+Narbonne, council of, 339.
+National Convention of France, 307, 317.
+Nero, Roman emp., 98, 311.
+Nerva, Roman emp., 36.
+Ney, Marshal, 322.
+Niagara Falls, 87.
+Nicaea, council of, 109, 231.
+Nicolaitans, 44, 49, 50.
+Nicholas, 172.
+Nicolas, 44.
+Notre Dame, 309.
+
+
+O
+
+Odoacer, 148, 236.
+Oppede, 117.
+Oriental Philosophy, 410.
+Origen, 107.
+Osiris, 407.
+Ostrogoths, 141, 145, 148, 215, 236, 351, n.
+Othman, See _Ottoman_.
+Otto the Great, 326
+Ottoman, 61, 169.
+Ottoman empire, 64, 165, 173, 441.
+Oxford, council of, 339.
+
+
+P
+
+Pactolus, 56.
+Pache, 308.
+Paderewski, 88.
+Paganism, 97, 214-232, 331, 388-390.
+Palestine, conquered by Saracens, 160;
+ invaded by Crusaders, 166.
+Pannonia, 215.
+Papacy, first steps to apostasy,
+ 102, 184, 185; growth of its power,
+ 103-107, 108, 110, 111, 184, 236-243, 352, n.;
+ Pope styled Universal Bishop, 110, 184;
+ blasphemous titles of, 242, 243, 264, 337;
+ its war against the saints, See _Christians,
+ persecutions of;_ at its height, 111,
+ also n., 184, 236, 305, 326, 236-243;
+ temporal power of, 184, 236, 305, 326, 336, 352, n.;
+ removal of Papal chair to Avignon, 305, 306;
+ spiritual supremacy lost at the Reformation,
+ 191, 249-251;
+ revolt of the temporal princes, 255, 355;
+ end of its temporal power, 255, 327, 328;
+ decree of Papal infallibility, 243, 346.
+Papal States, See _Papacy, temporal power of._
+Patmos, 36.
+Patriarch, office of, 109, 110.
+Patriciate, 350, 351, also n.
+Paul of Antioch, 188, 189.
+Paulus, 344.
+Pavia, battle of, 191.
+Pepin, Carlovingian king, 236, 305, 326, 350.
+Pergamus, fate of, 64, 68.
+Persecutions, See _Christians, persecutions of._
+Persia, conquered by Saracens, 160.
+Petrus Lombardus, 96.
+Peucer, 292.
+Philadelphia, remarkable preservation of, 61-64, 68.
+Philip Augustus, 111.
+Philosophists, 297-303.
+Phocas, Roman emp. 184.
+Phocis, 137.
+Pius IV., Pope, 327.
+Platina, 345.
+Pliny, 222, 226.
+Poland, 169.
+Polycarp, 46.
+Pontifex Maxima, 222, 239.
+Poor Men of Lyons, 198.
+Popes, power of, See _Papacy_.
+Portugal overrun by Saracens, 160.
+Prague, 244.
+Proles, Andrew, quoted, 246.
+Protestantism, rise of, 191, 252, 254;
+ its false miracles, 259-261;
+ its persecutions, See _Christians,
+ persecutions of._
+Proetextatus, 188.
+Puritans, 293.
+
+
+R
+
+Ravenna, 148, 351, 352, n.;
+ exarchate of, 351, n.
+Reformation, the, 249-252;
+ predictions of by medieval Christians, 243-249.
+Regal power, 214, also n.
+Reign of Terror in France, 306-315.
+Revival of Learning, 249.
+Rheims, 140.
+Roberts, Bishop, quoted, 364.
+Robespierre, 307, 309, 313.
+Rodgers, Hester Ann, 368.
+Romagna, 327.
+Roman Empire, forms of, See _Heads, seven_, and _Horns, ten_;
+ Christianity the State religion under Constantine, 116, 231;
+ division of under Valens and Valentinian, 440;
+ overrun by barbarians, 25, 125, 136-141, 142, 143, 145, 146, 148;
+ fall of Western division (A.D. 476), 133, 148, 236, 440;
+ fall of Eastern division (A.D. 1453), 167, 169, 172, 440, 441.
+Rome, 109, 138, 139, 143.
+Rosetta stone, 18, n.
+Rosseau, 300.
+Rubenstein, 88.
+Rutter, quoted, 186.
+
+
+S
+
+St. Anthony, 189, 190.
+St. Aquinas, quoted, 340.
+St. Bartholomew, massacre of, 117.
+St. Dennis, 307.
+St. Petersburg, 172.
+Salutaris Vibius, 42.
+Saracens, 26, 61, 110, 156-163.
+Sardinia, 143.
+Sardis, capital of Lydia, 56;
+ fate of, 58, 64, 68.
+Savage, Minton J., quoted, 413-415.
+Saxons, See _Anglo-Saxons._
+Saxony, 244, 250, 251.
+Schweinitz, 248.
+Scott, 0., quoted, 363.
+Scythia, 136, 139.
+Septimus Severus, Roman emp., 98, 224.
+Sergius, Pope, 344, 345, 346.
+Sickles, Daniel, quoted, 405.
+Siddartha, 409.
+Sienna, council of, 340.
+Simpson, quoted, 362.
+Sisera, 332.
+Smyrna, preservation of, 48, 64, 68.
+Socrates, 409.
+Spain, overrun by Saracens, 160.
+Sparta, 137.
+Spires, 140, 191;
+ diet of, 191, 253.
+Spiritualism, 411, 412.
+States-General, of France, 306.
+Strasburg, 140.
+Suevi, 215.
+Sultanies, Turkish, names of, 165.
+Sunium, 137.
+Symbols, See _Hieroglyphics_.
+
+
+T
+
+Tables of Laws, Roman, 214.
+Talmage, T. DeWitt, quoted, 363, 412.
+Temple of Reason, 309.
+Tertullian, 107;
+ quoted, 134, 224-226.
+Tetzel, 250, 251.
+Theodoret, 96.
+Theodoric, 148, 236.
+Theodosius the Great, Roman emp., 136, 440, n.
+Thermopylae, 137.
+Thrace, 137.
+Thuanus, quoted, 200.
+Thyatira, fate of, 64, 68.
+Tiberius Caesar, Roman emp., 66.
+Tilsit, 172.
+Tmolus, Mount, 56.
+Toledo, council of, 339, 346.
+Toloso, council of, 339.
+Torgaw, 291.
+Tournay, 140.
+Tours, 161;
+ council of, 339.
+Trajan, Roman emp., 98, 104, 222.
+Trent, council of, 96.
+Tribunes, 214, also n.
+Tripoli, 143.
+Triumvirate, 214, also n., 351.
+Turenne, 307.
+Turin, 199.
+Turings, 215.
+Turks, See _Ottoman empire._
+
+
+U
+
+Universal Bishop, Pope styled, See _Papacy._
+Urban II., 96.
+
+
+V
+
+Valens, Roman emp., 440, also n.
+Valentinian, Roman emp., 143, 440, also n.
+Valerian, Roman emp., 98.
+Vandals, 25, 142, 143, 215.
+Vanosia, 347.
+Vatican, council of, 346.
+Vaudois, 196.
+Venaissin, 327.
+Venus, 241.
+Vicarius Filii Dei, blasphemous title of the Pope, 264.
+Victor Emmanuel, 255, 328.
+Victor III., Pope, 345.
+Vienna, attacked by Turks, 169;
+ congress of, 323.
+Visigoths, 138, 141, 146, 215.
+Voltaire, 297-302, 305, 306, 401.
+
+
+W
+
+Waddington, quoted, 94, 186, 346, 347.
+Wagram, battle of, 322.
+Waldenses, 113, 117, 161, 196, 200, 270, 339, 342.
+Warburton, quoted, 404.
+Waterloo, battle of, 324.
+Weishaupt, Dr. Adam, 300, 302, 403.
+Wesley, John, 368.
+Western Empire, See _Roman Empire_ also _Charlemagne_
+ and _Holy Roman Empire._
+Westphalia, 321.
+Wicks, Thos., quoted, 297-303, 321, 323.
+Wittemberg, 248, 249;
+ university of, 251.
+Wurms, 140.
+Wycliffe, 61, 340, 344.
+
+
+X
+
+Xerxes, 321.
+
+
+Y
+
+Yellowstone Park, 87.
+Yosemite Valley, 87.
+Yuruks, 58.
+
+
+Z
+
+Zend-Avesta, 406.
+Zoroaster, 406.
+Zurich, 292.
+Zwingle, Ulrich, reformer, 252.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Revelation Explained, by F. Smith
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